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GROUP SHOW "SIMPLE SABOTAGE" 📷


  • Kunsthal Nord, Aalborg Kjellerups Torv 5, 2. sal Aalborg, 9000 Denmark (map)

Simple Sabotage (Installation view). Kunsthal Nord, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix. 

Press release, december 2023

SIMPLE SABOTAGE
Wisrah C.V. da R. Celestino (BR/DE), Sarah Dominique (DRC/DK), Elizabeth Orr (US), Bat-ami Rivlin (US), SUPERFLEX (DK). Curated by Ilethia Sharp (US)

Simple Sabotage features five international artists, including a collective, who present works exploring themes of hostile architecture, exclusionary design, and systems both seen and unseen. The curatorial concept originated from researching the impacts of formal governance and infrastructures designed to exclude.

The exhibition draws its name from the declassified CIA Field Manual Strategic Services (Provisional) [1], a training document intended for average U.S. citizens during World War II to undermine enemies in the event of invasion. Built architectural environments and governing procedures collectively control individuals and societies. Within these systems, both public spaces and domestic properties are governed by a combination of formal and informal rules. Under the guise of protecting and maintaining order, these concealed or invisible systems often employ restrictive models and structures rooted in colonialism and capitalism. Addressing the complex interplay of these systems and their effects, Simple Sabotage exhibits installations that represent artistic approaches through found objects, sculptures, installation, and film.

SUPERFLEX, Beyond the End of the World, 2021. Photo: Simon Bendix.

SUPERFLEX, Beyond the End of the World, 2021. Photo: Simon Bendix.

In the entrance room, SUPERFLEX’s Beyond The End Of The World (2021), fills the kunsthal with ominous water sounds. The film takes place at the former reservoir Cisternerne (The Frederiksberg Museums). It portrays toilets covertly replicated from the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Bonn, subsequently depicting them overflowing as a means to scrutinize public access to strategic power structures. Governmental decisions conducted in secrecy came to the forefront in 1982 when the mayor of Aalborg was exposed, revealing that he had accepted a green moss bathroom as a bribe [2].

Bat-Ami Rivlin, Untitled (lawnmowers, caution tape), 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Bat-Ami Rivlin, Untitled (lawnmowers, caution tape), 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Bat-Ami Rivlin, Untitled (lawnmowers, caution tape), 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Bat-Ami Rivlin, Untitled (lawnmowers, caution tape), 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Untitled (lawnmowers, caution tape) (2023), Bat-Ami Rivlin’s formation of four lawn-mowers wrapped in red-and-white caution tape, takes over a room of its own. Rivlin’s practice utilizes locally sourced surplus and found objects, much like in this work. The lawnmowers are a common object in the local junkyards, owing to the current turnover of machines replaced by electric versions. The mowers’ function, to upkeep one's extended domestic space of a lawn or yard, is converted into the demarcating of a literal territory, thus mimicking the process of boundary-making that extends into ownership. One keeps the lawn with the intent of keeping ‘civilized’, an extension of domesticity into public space.

Sarah Dominique, WE ARE LIVING UNDER A BROKEN SPELL, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Sarah Dominique, WE ARE LIVING UNDER A BROKEN SPELL, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Sarah Dominique, WE ARE LIVING UNDER A BROKEN SPELL, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Sarah Dominique, WE ARE LIVING UNDER A BROKEN SPELL, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

A declaring statement by Sarah Dominique is repeatedly written on the institution's windows reading: WE ARE UNDER A BROKEN SPELL. Dominique reflects upon her experience as a refugee in her artistic practice. In this exhibition the body is present as she marks the building where she is an artist resident (in the studios above the kunsthal). The work calls to memory Achille Mbeme’s Bodies as Borders, where the philosopher and theorist examines the process of screening the “unknown or potentially risky body” at border checkpoints [3]. Similarly, in a recent effort to address perceived risks, a large Danish political party unveiled a proposal aimed at dismantling “ghettos” where immigrant communities are perceived as not fully integrating [4]. This concept bears parallels to historical practices found in racial segregation in the United States, where deliberate policies like low bridge clearances were implemented to prevent people of color from accessing specific neighborhoods [5].

Wisrah C.V. da R. Celestino, RENTAL/FATHER, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Wisrah C.V. da R. Celestino, RENTAL/FATHER, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Wisrah C.V. da R. Celestino, RENTAL/FATHER, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

RENTAL/FATHER (2023) by Wisrah C.V. da R. Celestino is a three-part segmented gate positioned in the central division of the kunsthal. The work is part of an ongoing research in which the artist proposes the rental of objects from their father’s yard in the drylands of upstate Minas Gerais, Brazil, where the artist was born and their parents lives. The gates’ aging metal curvatures, locks and arches date back to colonialist design or structures in the Americas, a topic Celestino often addresses in their practice.

Elizabeth Orr, Ruler #1, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Elizabeth Orr, Ruler #1, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Elizabeth Orr, Framed #1-2, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Elizabeth Orr, Circular Ruler #2, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Elizabeth Orr, Framed #1-2, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Elizabeth Orr, Framed #1-2, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Elizabeth Orr, Ruler #2, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix.

Using the warning sign color yellow and physical (U.S. standard, imperial) rulers or yardsticks, Elizabeth Orr bends and cuts standardized rulers to disrupt and highlight their design and intended purpose. Orr’s aluminum wall-hanging works visually resemble intentionally inaccessible blinds and windows. Orr’s work is modular, conceived of to fit within suitcases, offsetting the carbon footprint of the sculpture. One bent 72-inch Circular Ruler, (2023), fits perfectly into a standard-size suitcase, emphasizing the ruler as a guiding systemic principle. Orr challenges the non-pragmatic perceptions of formalist art, as articulated by Adrian Piper in Institutional Critique [6], accentuating the radiators in with glass and the non-functioning industrial electric sockets with convex glass in Framed #1 - #4 (2023). 

Simple Sabotage (Installation view). Kunsthal Nord, 2023. Photo: Simon Bendix. 

This exhibition integrates existing forms and conceptual indications of Simple Sabotage.

Opening: Friday the 8th of December, 4-6pm.
Exhibition period: December 8, 2023 - February 10, 2024.
More info: www.kunsthalnord.dk

Kindly supported by Aalborg Kommunes Billedkunstpuljer and Knud Højgaards Fond.


[1] Simple Sabotage, CIA Field Manual Strategic Services (Provisional), 1944.

[2] â€œDa politiet sĂĽ papiret om det mosgrønne badevĂŚrelse, rullede borgmesterens hoved”, TV2 Nord, 2023.

[3] â€œBodies as Borders”, Achille Mbeme, From the European South Journal, a transdisciplinary journal of postcolonial humanities, 2019.

[4] â€œDenmark Aims a Wrecking Ball at ‘Non-Western’ Neighborhoods”, The New York Times, 2023.

[5] â€œArchitectural Exclusion: Discrimination and Segregation Through Physical Design of the Built Environment”, Yale Law Journal, 2015.

[6] â€œPower relations within existing art institutions, Adrian Piper” (1983), Institutional Critique, an anthology on artists’ writings, 2009.