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Trust – Copenhagen  reconceptualization of an Art Festival

Trust – Copenhagen reconceptualization of an Art Festival

Pieter Vermeulen - Course Director & LecturerbyPieter Vermeulen - Course Director & Lecturer
October 5, 2015
in Art, Copenhagen, Culture, Sustainable Cities
1

TRUST is the name of this year’s Copenhagen Art Festival, a large-scale contemporary art event that, on its website, mostly seems to enjoy the safety in numbers (the 2012 edition had 12 curated exhibitions, 50 performances, 40 workshops, 106 film screenings, 39,477 visitors and so on). The overall whiff of city marketing and its unmistakable rhetoric rarely make this kind of urban festivals stand out. Equally, the pricey media campaigns rarely justify the long wanders through town, assisted by a map or app, in order to mark one or two pieces on your checklist. We know this story all too well by now, so what’s next?

TRUST_1480 In the photo: Emmanuelle Lainé at The Salon

In spite of this weary format, TRUST is overseeable and refreshing. Spread over five venues, the festival falls apart in different curated shows, connected by a predominantly aesthetic sensibility. The curator appointed for this edition is Sonia Dermience, who also came up with the new title. To better understand her approach, it may well be worthwhile to say also a few words about her past experience. Dermience founded the Brussels-based collective Komplot in 2002, one of the most vibrant project spaces in Belgium’s thriving artistic capital. Composed of several artist studios and an exhibition space, collaboration and experiment are key to its mission. Over the years, Komplot has come to represent a contemporary art scene that is hard to define, yet easy to identify. Not surprisingly then, Dermience has conducted research into post-1968 collective in Belgium, under the name of Catherine Vertige.

IMG_8613     In the photo: Seyran Kirmizitoprak at The Salon

Dermience’s background definitely seeps through to the general outline of TRUST, which basically looks like a reconceptualization of the art festival. To do this, the curator has a few convincing tricks up her sleeve.  Five important art venues in the city (and Copenhagen has surprisingly many for its size) have been relabeled with fictional titles such as The Temple, The Salon or The Palace, based on bourgeois archetypes. This narrative layer added to the urban fabric is realized in collaboration with the Belgian design office Überknackig, who managed to give TRUST an overall edgy look. In fact, this open-ended use of narratives is reminiscent of what Jacob Fabricius, the former director of Kunsthal Charlottenborg (one of TRUST’s venues), did for the Contour Biennial in Mechelen, Belgium (2013). Also the inclusion of a newspaper for the show, Good Times & Nocturnal News by Carl Palm (exhibited at Overgaden aka The Temple), is a remarkable similarity between both.

12016562_10153133768358862_418408762_n    In the photo: Good Times 

Dermience’s general approach becomes clear in the surprising selection of artists, which stays far from easy name-dropping and contains a large number of collectives and collaborative practices. Imported from Belgium, for instance, is Jessica Baxter, an occasional artist collective that made a large-scale installation in Nikolaj Kunsthal (aka The Temple) with puzzling references to nightlife, consumer and tuning culture. A similar, unsettling combination of secular religiosity and drone sounds was present in the opening performance by We Are The Painters. In Kunsthal Charlottenborg, The After Lucy Experiment is showing a monumental bricolage with a nod to Copenhagen’s little mermaid and, more generally, the female sirens that supposedly caused countless ships to sink. Other instances of collaboration in TRUST include Cel Crabeels & Douglas Park, who are presenting an amusing video work as the outcome of an artistic pas de deux, and Loïc Vanderstichelen & Jean-Paul Jacquet, with their wonderfully absurd video piece Every woman should have the tools to take control of her life. A Belgian fascination with the surrealist and absurdist character of objects is apparent from Jos De Gruyter & Harald Thys’s great photo series Objects as Friends.  Next to deeply poetic contributions by Sophie Haesaerts and Atalay Yavuz, a special mention goes to the talented Steinar Haga Kristensen, whose gloomy opera (shown as a video) could have left no one untouched.

TRUST_1720In the photo:  Carl Palm and FOS at The Salon

Despite a couple of scenographical faux pas (the interference of different pieces), TRUST should ultimately be considered as a way of putting collaboration at the heart of curatorial tactics, feverishly searching for the meaning of a genuine symbolical exchange. All or nothing, it’s worth the risk.

TRUST_TiT_uberknackig_LD01 In the photo: TRUST poster by Uberknackig

Artist in the installation / show: Blunt + Skensved, Olivier Castell,

Nico Colón, Jean-Allain Corre, Michele Gabriele, Dorota Gaweda, Elisabeth Greinecker, Anna Holtz, Candice Jacobs, Valentinas Klimašauskas, Karl Larsson, Natasja Loutchko, Nico Sebastian Meyer,pcnc_bay, Antoine Renard, Arvid Wretman

Exhibition Tours / Performances: Ashby Collinson, Lisa Torell, Sebastian Rozenberg, Sanna Marander and Niklas Tafra
Further more on thingser.com
Tags: contemporary artCopenhagenCurator
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