ESTENG

2011

 

 



 

    “If it's Part Broke, Half Fix it”

Stalkers, Players and Taxies, Phone Calls and Laments, Corridors and Witness Reports, Disappointment and Shame

Contemporary Art Centre, Vilnius (CAC)
28.01.–13.03.2011

Opening 28 January at 6 pm
Live! The Pain: Hip-hop by Sam de Groot & Paul Haworth at 7 pm

An old English saying claims “If it ain't broke, don't fix it”. This expression has been popularised from the idea that any attempt to improve on a system that already works well is purposeless, and may even be detrimental. Supposedly, this saying later became even a source of inspiration for anti-activists. But what if something only works half-way?

It might be said that today's world is very much concerned with making the most effective and efficient use of a situation and therefore the concept of halfness as such is hardly ever considered as a quality in itself. However, if you half-fix something that is partly broke, will it end up being more fixed or more broke? The paradox included here provides space for a necessary amount of absurdity and ambiguity. Employing this, the exhibition “If it's part broke, half fix it” is not seizing an opportunity to tell a critical, engaged or unique story but is rather looking into different ways of and reasons for disappointment and shame but also speculation and chance, using Yahtzee-like methods, where the level of randomness is high and luck, use of probability, and modest amount of strategy are required.

For example the video “Players” by Pilvi Takala is portraying a poker community following the logic of the game. They are using probability theory that ensures that they treat each other justly, and that everyone contributes equally. In the video work of Flo Kasearu human lives are for sale, best was before and now it's over! Works by Anu Pennanen, Anna Shkodenko, Taaniel Raudsepp and Sigrid Viir are in one way or other dealing with the notion of constructed environments, surveillance and monitoring. Krõõt Juurak and Mårten Spångberg are redefining dominating concepts such as crisis, representation, wild-life, city or success, and the notion of starting from the beginning.

The collective Johnson & Johnson is “not sure when exactly things started to go wrong” but came to realize “how sad they feel about it”. Andrea Büttner states that “shame is a an emotion that indicates what really matters to us, a feeling reflecting on cultural conventions regarding what we are supposed to show or hide”. Epp Kubu is portraying rather tragicomical situations of people who don't know what to do and therefore start to enjoy the suffering. The installation “The Pain” by Paul Haworth and Sam de Groot argues that maybe seventeen-year-olds have been right all along, underlining the stark dichotomies of here and there, now and later, me and you.

Participating:
Andrea Büttner (GER), Dalia Dudenaite (LT), Dénes Farkas & Neeme Külm (EST), Carina Gunnars & Anna Kindgren (SWE), Sam de Groot (NL) & Paul Haworth (UK, NL), Johnson & Johnson (EST), Krõõt Juurak (EST, AT) & Mårten Spångberg (SWE), Flo Kasearu (EST), Epp Kubu (EST), Darius Mikšys (LT), Anu Pennanen (FIN), Taaniel Raudsepp & Sigrid Viir (EST), Rytis Saladžius (LT), Anna Škodenko (EST), Pilvi Takala (FIN), Triin Tamm (EST), Timo Toots (EST)

Curated by Margit Säde Lehni

Organised by Center for Contemporary Arts, Estonia and co-organized by Contemporary Art Centre, Vilnius

With the support of: Nordic Culture Point, Cultural Endowment of Estonia, Estonian Ministry of Culture and IASPIS

Thanks to: Hexaplan

Live!
28 January at 7 pm “The Pain”: Hip-hop by Sam de Groot & Paul Haworth
It’s hip-hop. Paul Haworth and Sam de Groot’s performances mix rap, beats, song, and poetry. Themes and subjects include: the city and its ebb and flow, babies, love, teen depression, inchoate longings. Paul studied as a painter, Sam as a graphic designer but it’s in hip-hop – the joy of performance, thrill of sculpting beats, search for rhymes, its clear and direct communication – that they have found their calling, their North Star.

Performance
12 February at 7 pm Ride the Wave Dude by Krõõt Juurak and Mårten Spångberg
“Ride the Wave Dude” performs a drive to redefine central concepts such as crisis, representation, wild-life, city or success and the notion of starting from the beginning. To start from a place where nothing has been started implies a certain kind of risk management, where possible failure refers to reality-status rather than entertainment. “Ride the Wave Dude” is willing to take that risk and invites the spectator to share journeys in expression, thought and structure. One single issue is shared: the irreversible activation of decision. A decision that regulates liberty, that eliminates freedom - and gives up choice, in favor for an unconditional refusal to negotiate. “Ride The Wave Dude” understood as a mode of production is an absoutely blank wave, void of probability.

Contemporary Art Centre (CAC)
Vokieciu 2, Vilnius
www.cac.lt

Image: Pilvi Takala, Players, 2010, video 


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