Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen presents Susan Philipsz – The Missing on view through 6 April 2014.
In recent years, the Scottish artist Susan Philipsz—who refers to herself as a sculptor—has earned an international reputation for her striking sound installations. With The Missing String, Philipsz—a recipient three years ago of the prestigious British Turner prize—will be a guest in the bel etage of the K21 of the Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen.
Occupying the boundary between visual art and music, Philipsz’s space-filling sound installation alludes to a number of earlier exhibitions that took place in the impressive galleries of the Ständehaus. In this project, she raises questions about the setting’s historical context and about practices of conservation and collecting.
Through the deconstruction and rearrangement of sound and its localization in space, Philipsz effects a continuous redefinition of both media. Her handling of historical materials betrays an almost archaeological interest in that which is concealed, its multifarious potential conveyed through her work in striking ways to evoke a range of sensations and recollections. In her audio works, she employs the rock music of the 1970s, along with Scottish sea shanties and the “Internationale.” The basis for her 2012 project for documenta was an orchestral work that was composed in 1943 in the concentration camp at Theresienstadt, and premiered there as well.
The point of departure for The Missing String, created especially for the Kunstsammlung, is the artist’s wide-ranging research into the subject of the war-damaged musical instruments found today in numerous collections throughout Germany. They constitute a striking emblem of the destructive fury of war, and mirror the often tragic fates suffered by artists during the National Socialist dictatorship. The search for these testimonials of wartime experience, many of which have vanished into archives and storage depots, allows Susan Philipsz’s work to become a genuinely revelatory act.
For the production of The Missing String, she was able to use an entire series of war-damaged instruments, thereby employing them for their original purpose—to make music—for her recordings. Battered, displaying bullet holes, twisted out of shape, each narrates a different, moving story: simultaneously historical objects and musical instruments, their sound quality shaped in unavoidable ways by the impact of war.
In an emblematic fashion, the damaged instruments are interpretable as complex symbols of disruption. The image of the broken or missing string conveys harmony, tension, as well as distance, thereby functioning as an image of disquiet. Philipsz found a compositional foil for her work in Richard Strauss’s Metamorphosen for 23 Solo Strings, composed in 1945. By having this composition’s individual tones performed in an isolated fashion, by rearranging and then creating a scenario for them, she opens up a new spatial level. In the bel etage of the historic Ständehaus, the installation exposes a series of historical contexts and artistic references in a prismatic fashion: anchored directly in the site, the work is experienced only through the interplay of sound and space.
Susan Philipsz was born in Glasgow, Scotland in 1965. Between 1989 and 1994, she studied fine arts and sculpture at the Jordanstone College of Art in Dundee and the University of Ulster in Belfast. In recent years, solo exhibitions have been devoted to her work at, among others, the Vienna Secession, the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh, the MAXXI Museum in Rome, and the Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art, as well as the Guggenheim Museum in New York.
Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen
K21 STÄNDEHAUS – Bel Etage
Ständehausstr. 1
40217 Düsseldorf
Germany
T +0049 211 8381 204
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www.kunstsammlung.de