Imponderable: the Archives of Tony Oursler

Imponderable: the Archives of Tony Oursler

Luma Foundation

“Ectoplasm” under an ultraviolet light, early 20th century. Photo: Aaron Fedor. Courtesy Tony Oursler.

April 16, 2015

Imponderable: the Archives of Tony Oursler
6 July–20 September 2015

Les Forges
Parc des Ateliers
Arles
France

www.luma-arles.org

An exhibition commissioned and produced by the LUMA Foundation for the Parc des Ateliers in Arles, France.

Imponderable is an extensive research project that investigates the personal collection of American artist Tony Oursler, a remarkable trove of more than 2,500 photographs, publications and unique objects, tracking a social, spiritual and intellectual history dating back to the early 18th century. 

The project’s title, Imponderable, suggests the idea of something that cannot be determined with accuracy. Eighteenth-century scientists used the word to describe magnetism, electricity, and other than unquantifiable energies, many of which are represented in Oursler’s archive. The imponderable also suggests an area of open speculation populated by numerous conflicting belief systems. But Oursler is also interested in how even the most incredible ideas can be presented in such a way that they convince the audience of their veracity. 

This initial research into these fringe practices of media histories and occult phenomenon led Oursler further into ideas of speculative thought, the boundaries of science, the use of the spectacular, which resonate with contemporary pop culture.

The landscape of the archive covers numerous categories such as: stage magic, thought photography, demonology, cryptozoology, optics, Mesmerism, automatic writing, hypnotism, fairies, cults, pareidolia, the occult, color theory and UFOs. For Oursler, nested and mirrored within this archive is an intriguing family history.

For the LUMA Foundation in Arles, this exhibition investigates new possibilities for archives and artistic production, which is one of its primary concerns. Imponderable translates the original archival materials into the form of a film, an installation and a publication, providing new insight into both the material gathered by the artist over many years and the trajectory of his own work.

The 4D film-based experience explores the conflicting and overlapping belief systems implicit within his grandfather’s engagement with the debunking of paranormal activity, The broader reach of the archival material is presented in a 600-page, fully illustrated publication that makes the archive available to the public for the first time. Alongside a substantial visual catalogue of Oursler’s archive, organized by the artist, this publication gathers a large number of newly commissioned texts by scholars, historians and fellow enthusiasts for material that certainly lies outside the mainstream.

Commissioned and produced by the LUMA Foundation for the Parc des Ateliers, Arles, France. Curated by Tom Eccles (Director, CCS Bard College, New York) and Beatrix Ruf (Director, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam). The exhibition is part of the international photography festival Les Rencontres d’Arles 2015.

About LUMA Foundation and LUMA Arles
The LUMA Foundation was established in 2004 to support the activities of independent artists and pioneers, as well as institutions working in the fields of art and photography, publishing, documentary, and multimedia. The foundation specializes in challenging artistic projects combing a particular interest in environmental issues, human rights, education, and culture in the broadest sense.

The LUMA Foundation and LUMA Arles, founded in 2014 in support of the project in Arles, are currently developing an experimental cultural center in the Parc des Ateliers in the city of Arles, France, working with the architects Frank Gehry and Annabelle Selldorf. This ambitious project envisions an interdisciplinary center dedicated to the production of exhibitions and ideas, research, education, and archives and is supported by a growing number of public and private partnerships. 

About the image: 
The ectoplasm produced by mediums during séances was made from a variety of materials but was most commonly cheesecloth (pictured here), sometimes soaked in a fluorescent substance so that it would glow in the darkness of the séance room. Psychics claimed that the material was the physical manifestation of a spiritual presence. 

 
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