Borderline Art Space inaugurates on Wednesday, May 29, starting at 7 PM, the exhibition “Spaces that dream of us”, by the artists Leopold Kessler and Tudor Pătrașcu, curated by Cristian Nae.
Curatorial argument:
“What kind of “other spaces” can art generate? In 1967, Michel Foucault presented the conference “Other Spaces” in Paris, proposing the idea that alongside dystopias and utopias (which potentially exist in the form of fictions), or virtual spaces, there exist around us heterotopias. The latter are real, concrete spaces, which are distinguished by their different functioning and thus delimit their own place within the social field organised according to standardised rules. But he could not have foreseen in detail the profound transformations that social life would undergo some half a century later.
As a result of the intensification of advertising communication, the generalisation of consumption and the internalisation of forms of control exercised at the most intimate level over the desires and imagination of consumers (now turned into producers) in advanced capitalist societies, the heterotopias mentioned by Foucault in that lecture – including the space of imaginative freedom and social anomie specific to art – have themselves become sign-producing machines that can easily be commodified. We live in a kind of total simulation, without a trace of exteriority, in which subjects are invited to comfortably dream of satisfying the next desires that capital produces, and time itself becomes a marketable commodity.
The artistic projects conceived by Tudor Pătrașcu and Leopold Kessler explore the utopia of a comfortable world, an imaginary space of complete well-being, in which individuals are fed with illusions like the characters in the Wachowski sisters’ film “The Matrix”, while the capitalist production network insidiously feeds on their phantasmatic energy. The exhibition project prepared for Borderline Art Space proposes an imaginary populated with the phantasms of self-fulfillment, illustrating at the same time the bankruptcy of forms of social critique and the demise of the revolutionary project of the artistic avant-garde, of which nothing seems to be left but another form of visual language exploitable in the form of signs emptied of their original political potential.
The promise of authentic community life and frictionless collectivity is brutally demystified by Leopold Kessler’s video works – recordings of a collective performance made in public space, one of which was made in Iasi on the occasion of this exhibition. These counterpoint the drawings with which Tudor Pătrașcu (re)projects the world as a fractured space, built from overlapping fragments, in which authentic communication is replaced by brands and slogans, and artistic language seems to be constituted at the level of geometric abstraction as a simulacrum of a concrete reality long gone. In this sense, the exhibition space transforms the artists and the public into imagined characters inside a hallucination produced by the capitalist matrix.
Leopold Kessler (b. 1976, Munich) lives and works in Vienna. He graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich (1996-1998) and the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna (1998-2004). His work has been shown in solo exhibitions in Malmo Konsthall, Bunkier Sztuki, Krakow, and Secession, Vienna. He was invited in group shows in Broad Art Museum of Michigan State University, Palais de Tokyo and de Appel, Amsterdam. He participated in 3rd Singapore Biennale, 10th Biennale de Lyon and Manifesta 05 in San Sebastian.
Leopold Kessler’s interventions in legal apparatus, commercial services and public spaces are based on ingenious and dry, humorous observations of urban life and show an acute awareness of the worldly systems that keep today’s society running. Kessler’s works also offer a unique view of psychogeography. He does not reorganize the city with the rhetoric of hallucinatory miracles or revolutionary romanticism, but through the perspective of work, infrastructure and maintenance and transforms these systems into a stage for urban black comedies.
Tudor Pătrașcu (b. 1979) is a visual artist who lives and works in Iași. He co-founded and was a member of the artistic duo ANTICAMERA, which operated from 2014 to 2021. Drawing plays a central role in his artistic practice, serving as a cognitive tool within a methodology that involves working with diverse types of archives. His projects explore themes related to personal and collective memory, political conflicts and recent history.
Selected exhibitions: „Occupy Art Festival | Occupy #3 NETWORKS, New York, U.S.A (2022); “Future Collection”, apARTe Gallery, Iaşi (2021); Black-and-White Biennial, Museum of Art, Satu Mare, Romania; “Virus Diary”, White Cuib Gallery, Cluj-Napoca (2020); “Show off 2”, MATCA artspace, Cluj-Napoca (2019); Biennale Jeune Création Européenne, Montrouge, France (2019); “BOOKS + PAPERS II”, Christine König Gallery, Vienna (2019); “Memory as Vision”, Cluj Cultural Center, Cluj-Napoca (2018); Work presentation by Artists in Residence 02/2018, BKA-Veranstaltungsraum, Vienna (2018); “Transcultural Emancipation”, FLUC, Vienna (2018); “Flag Down The Flag”, Art Encounters Foundation, Timişoara (2018); “VOID. Whiskey. Tango. Foxtrot”, apARTe Gallery, Iaşi (2017).