Project | Scenarios | Events | Supporter | Information | 2nd Section | deutsch
Project | Scenarios | Events | Supporter | Information | 2nd Section | deutsch
Claude Cahun‘s (1894-1954) photographic work was widely overlooked by art history until its rediscovery in the 1980s, when, against the background of feminist debates, it gained unexpected relevance. Influenced by contemporary currents of symbolism and surrealism, her self-portraits display a unique perspective on the body, staged as a projection screen for social norms and personal and external desires. A play with disguise and gender masquerade inquires the relation of gaze and being seen, and the way this becomes effective in the visual setup of the portrait. Her work thereby refers to cultural stereotypes of her time, which are decoded and subverted, confronting them with a subtle and unpredictable expressivity. Shown are three photographic works from the 1920s.
Eran Schaerf sets up a combined re-enactment
of prior works.
The installation Voile lances the room with a cloth panel, its course following
the basic architectonic structures. In a gesture of reduplication a second,
semi-transparent room is created. The attention is directed to the way how
architecture opens the room as a stage for views and movements, thus enabling
and structuring social interaction. This diaphanous barrier, resembling a
curtain or a veil, is a marking that unfolds a play of visibility that crosses
the coding of the public and the intimate.
The situation established by Voile is continued by a narration of the Sapeurs,
drawing on clothing as a practice with manifold cultural, gender-related and
functional codifications. La Sape (short for: La Société des
Ambianceurs et des Personnes Élégantes) is a movement originating
from Kongo. Its mostly male protagonists use western designer brands for distinctive
self-representation. Eran Schaerf frames the intricate trails of global exchange
and the contradictions arising from acts of appropriation and translation
into a narrative setting: A shirt by Paul Smith becomes a momentum of crisis
in the life of a Sapeur. In Paris, the Sapeur comes across a shirt, which
has its own history of migration. It is tailored from a Kanga, a rectangular
piece of cloth, which in Africa serves in different functions as a garment.