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[January
18th 2003]
press release
Creeping Revolution 2
18 January – 16 March 2003
Rooseum
Gasverksgatan 22
2000 11 Malmø, Sweden
Tel. +46-40-121716
Fax +46-40-304561
www.rooseum.se
Open: We-Fr 2pm-8pm, Sa-Su 12noon-6 pm
Guided Tours Th 6.30 pm, Sa & Su 2 pm
Participating artists: Bas Jan Ader (NL), Sture Johannesson
(S), Silke Otto-Knapp (D), Mathilde Rosier (F), Wilhelm
Sasnal (PL), Lily van der Stokker (NL), Frances Stark
(US)
Creeping Revolution 2 continues a series of experimental exhibition
and project models that Rooseum has tested over the past 2 years.
Creeping Revolution 2 is a group exhibition of artists whose work
is primarily visual and seeks to affect the world through personal
illuminationand individual experience, often reflecting on immediate
friends and familyrather than society as a whole. In some ways it
can be seen as an opportunity to consider the flipside of the socially
engaged documentary work that has been shown in Rooseum over the
past six months. However, any idea that this is a return to a reactionary
position must be dismissed. It is a case of maintaining both social
and personal change (even revolution) as equally significant aims
for contemporary art. To define the work in the exhibition as revolutionary
is to suggest that the way art makes change possible is at least
as much in the head as it effects actions on the street. To modify
it with the term creeping is to provide a measure of the speed and
accuracy of its effect, as well as introducing the slowly changing
methodology of the exhibition itself.
Creeping Revolution 2 takes its lead from an exhibition organised
by Foksal Gallery, Warsaw in 2000. In that exhibition a number of
artists worked on the walls and floor of the small white cube space,
being invited over a period of one month to add to works already
in the gallery. Creeping Revolution 2 takes a similar approach,
inviting artists for the opening and then adding or changing work
over the period of the show. The idea is to encourage viewers to
return and compare from one stage to the next, allowing them to
see different stages as the exhibition is built up. Also we hope
to encourage the artists to see their work in connection with each
other and possibly respond to elements in another’s work. Finally,
this way of making a show will push the usual boundaries of the
institution with its desire for stasis and preservation and continue
the institutional experiment of the new Rooseum.
If the current vogue for documentary and analytical art is to thrive
it needs intelligent, interesting critique from other angles. If,
at some point in the future, we are to avoid a simplistic swing
back towards dumb expressionism, we should think about how to balance
analysis with imagination, the political with the personal, change
in society with expanding revolutionary consciousness. Creeping
Revolution 2 by starting a discussion about work that is aesthetically
rather than overtly politically engaged, seeks to raise that debate
and contribute to an understanding that beauty, friendship and the
personal can be revolutionary too.
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