28 March till 8 May 2012

THE PRESENT MOMENT AND ONLY THE PRESENT MOMENT

Suzanne Rietdijk

translation: Jenny Wilson

The Now is. The Now cannot have passed or is still to come. It exists in favour of continuous replacement. We cannot remember nor imagine the Now. The only thing we can do is to alter the condition of the Now beforehand. The experience of the Now can be manipulated through intentional changes in time and space. It is this form of preconceived change that the curator Angela Serino has applied and researched during her working period at kunsthuis SYB. By giving people the opportunity to experience another state of being, Serino has created conditions for experiencing the now. Her residency is therefore not a working period in the sense of ‘work’ being a forming of or a striving towards an end product. It is an experience.

As a conclusion to her working period at SYB, Serino has organised a preconceived experience for her guests. This experience starts in the back room of SYB, where Paola Anzichè has installed a colourful net comprising pieces of lycra that are knotted together. The net is titled ‘Spaziando (seeing with the hands)’ and horizontally crosses through the space at chest height so that the visitor is forced to physically adjust to the newly formed spatial conditions. Only by walking bent down is the visitor able to move through this space. Furthermore, it is also possible to move your way up through the net at any given moment so that the elastic fabric network surrounds your body and you can play with the possibilities the material offers. By hanging onto or pulling it, everyone is able to manipulate the net, as well as the people finding themselves in it. An ‘action-reaction’ arises, where object, space and subject influence each other and are continually able to alter each other’s conditions.

Elsewhere in the space is a monitor displaying a group of people who, also with elastic materials, are collectively playing with the space and each other’s movements. It is a short video documentary about Lygia Clark and her workshops in Paris at the beginning of the 70’s. In this documentary, created by Anzichè, a shared reconstruction of this period is made from the memories of various eyewitnesses and several remaining video fragments. The video also shows where the installation ‘Spaziando’ took its roots from and directly places this installation in a historical context. As such, experiences of the now come together with moments from the past, and just like in the video documentary, freshly formed memories gain a new and almost imaginary charge.

The next moment in Serino’s compilation of experiences is the short performance by Elsbeth Ciesluk. By expressing her vocal range, Ciesluk shows the physicality of the performance. She is searching for extremes: from one that is very soft, to one that is very loud, to a vocal expression lasting as long as possible. Sometimes she claims the entire space through the sounds that she produces. But, when physical exertion finally breaks her voice and the loud scream slowly lapses into a fragile timbre she also shows the vulnerability of her own physical conditions.

In the last two moments that Serino has conditioned for the visitor, professor Andreas Schwab gives a short lecture about the historical anarchistic community that established itself in Monte Verità (Ascona) around 1900. This is followed by a collective mental exercise where tasks such as “recall the present moment and only the present moment” question aspects of the now, the bygone moment and memory versus the imagination.[1]

The start of Serino’s research relating to artist residencies is presented with this short sequence of experiences that she has put together in SYB. In the weeks prior to the final presentation several artists and artist collectives such as ADA (Rotterdam) and The Living Room(s) (Amsterdam) were invited as part of the reading group to jointly reflect on the phenomenon of ‘working periods’ through a collectively compiled reading list[2]. The aim of this was not to ultimately formulate answers to the questions posed. In the contrary, achievement as a goal was ruled out through the conditions that Serino had put to the reading group, and even laziness took on a positive value. Many new questions as well as new perspectives finally arose through this approach, allowing the subject to gain an increasingly wider significance.

Looking into the conditions to which artists are exposed during working periods, Serino and her reading group detected many similarities with our mutual attitude in relation to present society: both in residencies as well as in everyday life, people are subjected to the pressure to produce and to achieve. Although freedom should be a specific condition for a residency, it seems the realisation of working periods is in itself a demand that every serious artist subjects themselves to. According to Serino, this causes a forced hyper-mobility in which artists have to continually be on the move to allow their work to always be valid everywhere. The pressure enforced by the institutions concerned is huge and offers – in contrast to their hard-won ideologies – an incredibly directed work environment.

In spite of these discoveries, what Serino finally presents is not a solid, concluding message to current residency places. On the contrary, by means of historical references and examples, only a start has been made in researching both the conditions of artist residencies as well as society as a whole. To be able to carry out this research, theory was immediately put into practice. In an almost utopian work environment created by Serino, achievement is replaced by action and everyone has the space and freedom to bring a new interpretation to his/her experience. The ‘now’ of the action is more important than the future end result of the achievement. The process, the time between deed and consequence, takes centre stage. Yet, despite the preconceived manner of experience, what actually arises is a pleasant freedom in which no one is forced into anything in particular. Nothing is expected of the visitor, except perhaps a little time to be able to experience the new rhythm of the condition posed. In the small space of SYB the need to continually achieve is released for a moment so as to create new conditions for a Now in which even laziness is accepted.

[1] The initiative for carrying out this mental exercise came from the artist Maria Pask. The series of 14 instructions were drawn up in 1970 by Victor Burgin (UK). In carrying out this exercise Pask attempted to shift the boundaries of imaginative powers: “As a mental performance this exercise will bring you to the very extremes of your imaginary abilities.”
[2] The reading list, which Serino drew up at the start to invite participants, can be found on the project’s weblog.