When it Stops Dripping from the Ceiling (An Exhibition That Thinks About Edification)

Research output: Artistic and non-textual formExhibitionArt in coproductionpeer-review

Abstract

In present times, some are calling for the invention of new terminologies that can more accurately discern phenomena affecting our lives, culturally, socially, and politically. Sometimes, the terms that we need are not to be reinvented but merely excavated and given new meaning. Edification is perhaps one such term. A quick dictionary search will tell you that edification means ‘to instruct especially so as to encourage intellectual, moral, or spiritual improvement’, that it denotes an ‘uplifting enlightenment that results in understanding and the spread of knowledge’.

During the past three centuries, edification has been about individual thinkers creating equations for resolving the gap between the individual’s autonomy and the society the individual functions within. These equations are eventually diluted, simplified, or reconfigured to become the intellectual basis of states, the cultural codes of sociopolitical systems, or the administrative mechanisms of oppressive regimes. This exhibition attempts to think about the impact of edification on the way we live, practice politics, make art, and communicate. It features a range of diverse works by seven artists; which indirectly address the struggle, and ongoing debate between individual autonomy and social collectivity.

But, how can we recognize edification? Think about how, although you have never read Gustave Flaubert’s novels, you have recently come to realize that you have been edified by them, or about how you know the essence of almost every article featured in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights despite the fact that you have never bothered to read it. Think about how in moments of great despair or pain you suddenly find yourself reverting to religious terminology, even though you are more of an agnostic than a self-proclaimed believer. Or about, how in the middle of an intimate interaction of love, you can only express your emotions in words that seem to be generic lines abundant in popular romantic movie scripts. Think about how many artists, curators, and art writers today either embody or struggle to escape the edification of such long-dead thinkers as Friedrich Schiller and John Ruskin[1], reinventing or trying to escape the reinvention of the moral-aesthetical wheels that they first invented. Edification is not an ultimately determining factor controlling life nor is it an omnipresent external force but it is that which lives in the gap between the individual’s will and a society’s idea of itself as a society.

The exhibition will be infiltrated with replicas of sculptural works by Martin Kippenberger (1953-1997) whose diverse artistic output exemplified an artist’s confrontation with the legacies of past edifications of art and its history, and which in turn led his oeuvre to be among the most referenced by students in today’s art academies. Taking inspiration from the well known 2011 incident in which a cleaning lady mistakenly cleaned a trompe l’oeil puddle painted on a component of Kippenberger’s piece entitled ‘When it Starts Dripping from the Ceiling’, these copies will be given an everyday use value and become part of other artists’ works, remaining largely unrecognizable as Kippenbergers for most visitors.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationParis
PublisherKADIST Art Foundation
Publication statusPublished - 14 Jun 2012
MoE publication typeF2 Partial implementation of a work of art or performance
EventWhen it Stops Dripping from the Ceiling (An Exhibition that Thinks about Edification) - Paris, France
Duration: 14 Jun 201229 Jul 2012
https://kadist.org/program/when-it-stops-dripping-from-the-ceiling-an-exhibition-that-thinks-about-edification/

Field of art

  • Contemporary art

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