JUNE 2017
Alfredo Brillembourg, Hubert Klumpner,
Alexis Kalagas, Katerina Kourkoula
Reactive Athens
Ruby Press, 2017
DEAR FRIEND OF 8 BOOKS A YEAR,
A few days ago, documenta 14 opened in Kassel again. Since it only takes place every 5 years, expectations are always high. And there was something different this time: documenta opened first not in its hometown, but in Greece. The curators also made a motto out of what this implied: “Learning from Athens”. As much as I liked this surprising twist when I first read about it (most of the time it’s much more interesting to listen to the underdog than to the champion), I have to confess that I was a bit disappointed when I eventually visited Kassel. Instead of discovering a lot of inspiring, brave, uncommon and uncomfortable art, I was confronted with a myriad of critical (which I love) but obsessively direct and lecturing works which could already have been around a few decades ago. I think it’s a privilege of artists (and curators) to jump ahead of their times and to drive the discourse – and they definitely should make use of this privilege. After having walked around 1 day at documenta, I thought again about their motto, which I mentioned above. I guess we all agree that “learning from” somebody is always a great thing to do – as long as no one makes an imperative out of it. This just turns learning into teaching and dialogue into proclamation. The idea of knowing exactly what to do or how to deal with the challenges we all face today is an illusion we should scrupulously recognize as such. Therefore our new choice is not a book about documenta, but one about Athens. It provided me with a lot of fresh ideas and concepts on how some problems could be dealt with in a very different way. Problems we all know, ideas which can be realized everywhere. So, even if it’s not a book about art, it finally became my better documenta 14.
All my best,
Christian Kaspar Schwarm
Alfredo Brillembourg, Hubert Klumpner,
Alexis Kalagas, Katerina Kourkoula
Reactive Athens
Ruby Press, 2017
Read InscriptionDEAR FRIEND OF 8 BOOKS A YEAR,
A few days ago, documenta 14 opened in Kassel again. Since it only takes place every 5 years, expectations are always high. And there was something different this time: documenta opened first not in its hometown, but in Greece. The curators also made a motto out of what this implied: “Learning from Athens”. As much as I liked this surprising twist when I first read about it (most of the time it’s much more interesting to listen to the underdog than to the champion), I have to confess that I was a bit disappointed when I eventually visited Kassel. Instead of discovering a lot of inspiring, brave, uncommon and uncomfortable art, I was confronted with a myriad of critical (which I love) but obsessively direct and lecturing works which could already have been around a few decades ago. I think it’s a privilege of artists (and curators) to jump ahead of their times and to drive the discourse – and they definitely should make use of this privilege. After having walked around 1 day at documenta, I thought again about their motto, which I mentioned above. I guess we all agree that “learning from” somebody is always a great thing to do – as long as no one makes an imperative out of it. This just turns learning into teaching and dialogue into proclamation. The idea of knowing exactly what to do or how to deal with the challenges we all face today is an illusion we should scrupulously recognize as such. Therefore our new choice is not a book about documenta, but one about Athens. It provided me with a lot of fresh ideas and concepts on how some problems could be dealt with in a very different way. Problems we all know, ideas which can be realized everywhere. So, even if it’s not a book about art, it finally became my better documenta 14.
All my best,
Christian Kaspar Schwarm