|
my installation at the vienna secession which is titled; gone, yet still i'm
sorry i haven't put any pictures or words lately but i was busy making this
and now i am on holiday in peru and i hope to bee friends again with you! as
written by the vienna secession:
The installation in the Grafisches Kabinett is fundamentally shaped by a meditation about the design of a space for holding out, waiting for death and finally passing away. A story of refusal, Georges Perec's novel A Man Asleep was inspirational for the piece. Shortly before graduating, a young man turns away from all social existence – its constraints, senselessness and futility – and decides not to engage with anything anymore. He gives over to aimlessness and slowly loses his feeling of belonging to the world. Finally the student abandons the experiment with the insight that his withdrawal from the world has no further consequence on the course of things. A bed, a chair, a shelf, a refrigerator. Terence Koh combines this existential furnishing with the baroque opulence of more than 125 glass vitrines the size of fish tanks. They are filled with the devotionalia typical for Koh's work: Animal figurines, little dolls, two kissing marble busts of the last pope, miniature Michael Jackson figures, Chinese reincarnation statues, plastic dinosaurs, insects, etc. – some are filled with water, others bear the traces of a ritual. Terence Koh, exhibition viewThe installation is infused with symbols and an overall atmosphere of gay sexuality, images of youthful bodies, faces, butts and cocks. Ultimately, Koh creates an open space, a queer space, in which sexuality is represented as a fact and not as an argument. In his work, sexuality is not subject to moral, ideological, or restrictive constraints, but rather tempts us to forget the hardships and diremption of existence. The installation is less of an autobiographical display than an attempt to bring to mind the fragility of a single life, to document the „Boudoir“ of an existence, in which death is ever present as the only certain and simultaneously unknowable fact. Terence
Koh, exhibition view Terence Koh illustrates the ambivalence of human existence:
the desire to obsessively engage with the world, to realize longing in a space
outside of oneself, and simultaneously the infinite loneliness that every
human knows and experiences over and over again. His exhibition is a confrontation
with death as a necessarily abstract idea. In the loneliness of the room it
can be imagined as a relief, as a threat, or as the blackmail of others. It
transforms the glass boxes overflowing with objects into coffins. The harmony
of the scene is shattered by a number of smashed and shattered vitrines. The
resonance of these arbitrary acts, the violence that suddenly presents itself
in the space prevents the installation from simply looking like a still image
frozen in time and recalls the circular but unpredictable life that precedes
death. The first monographic catalogue will be published as the catalogue for the exhibition at the Secession with Essays by AA Bronson, Bruce Benderson, Bruce La Bruce, Philip Aarons und Shamim Momin.
|