The Other Tradition
A group show with Danai Anesiadou, Ei Arakawa (& Silke Otto-Knapp), Cezary Bodzianowski, Sharon Hayes, Sung Hwan Kim, Roman Ondák, Jimmy Robert, Katerina Šedá, Tino Sehgal, Jiří Skála, Pilvi Takala, Tris Vonna-Michell
Curated by Elena Filipovic
26 February – 1 May 2011
Opening:
25 February, 18:30 -21:00Avenue Van Volxemlaan 354
1190 Brussels, Belgium
T +32 (0)2 340 00 50
www.wiels.org
Wed – Sun, 11:00 – 18:00
Mon – Tue, closed
From the act of having two strangers spend the entire duration of the exhibition learning to copy the handwriting of the other (Jiří Skála) to staging outmoded or speculative demonstrations in different cities (Sharon Hayes) or from organizing the precise and timed activities of an entire village so that each person living there does the same ordinary task such as cleaning or eating at the exact same time (Kateřina Šedá) to engaging a museum attendant to spontaneously recite the day’s newspaper headline to visitors at the ticket desk (Tino Sehgal): these are just a few examples of projects featured in the exhibition.
In 1966, the late critic Gene Swenson curated an exhibition that he called The Other Tradition that proposed an alternative geneaology for the art of his day: rejecting the lineage connecting Cubism to Color Field painting that was then taken to be fact, he instead proposed a trajectory that claimed Dada and Surrealism the predecessors to Pop. This group exhibition, loosely inspired by that one, and reusing its title, looks at a generation of artists making art that positions itself against the too-long dominant idea of the autonomous, immutable, and material character of art; they create the conditions instead for the viewer to experience an event or action that is the heart of the artwork itself (and even devise ways for the audience to experience it when the action has already taken place). In the process, they make art forms that both continue but also break with something as dusty as what one might call an art historical “tradition”.
Different events and actions, installations, films, sculptures, and props will be visible as each artist’s contribution to this experimental attempt to identify the terms of what an other tradition of art could be. And yet, it should be said: this attempt eschews the form of either a festival of events or a presentation of mere documentation and instead decidedly articulates itself as an exhibition, with all the questions that making an exhibition for such artwork implies.
Read about all the special events and performances on The Other Tradition.
The exhibition receives the special support of
The Cultural Service of the Polish Embassy in Belgium, Czech Centre Brussels, Kaaitheater, The French Embassy in Belgium and the Finnish Cultural Institute Brussels.