Salles d ‘Urgence / Emergency Rooms
MANIFESTE
Urgent Proposition for Museums of Contemporary Art
Based on the observation that the visual artist is left out of the
debate about actuality. I believe that it would be healthy for society
to open up ‘Emergency Rooms’ in contemporary art institutions.
Such emergency spaces would give the artists the chance to visually
comment on actuality – an opportunity to express his/her position and
visions about today (today understood as today without any delay).
The Emergency Rooms will be updated every day and will have the
important concept of living at the same ultra fast speed of the news
(and it’s consequences like new wars…).
The Emergency Rooms will welcome any visual artist with burning visions
about the news.
The quality or aesthetic of the exhibitions is not important here. The
importance lies in the possibility to show art immediately. The
exhibition should function like the mass medias: Be renewed every day
and be up to date on the ongoing debates. For example, visual artists
working with video could re-edit and thus make new version of the TV
news; artists working with photo could reorganise the iconography of
newspapers to provide another angle. Visitors to the museum would see a
new version of the newspaper they have just read, or of the TV’s
‘breaking news’ that they just saw. Visitors should experience a new
vision of what is normally offered to them through the news media, a
new perception of the World’s actual situation.
To work this way, the visual artists need: An ‘Emergency Room’ – a real
physical space. It should be clear that an installation artist is not a
web artist or a writer of a chronicle. To express his/her burning
vision and feelings about what happens in the World today, the
installation artist needs an exhibition space. To be powerful in
his/her expression the artist needs to express him/herself in his own
language.
The actual situation is that if an artist wants to comment on a burning
actuality in an art institution, he must accept a delay of several
years before having the possibility to show his vision. The
contemporary art structure is putting the visual artist in a position
of a ‘retard’ (delayed response).
I believe that installation artists have important statements to make.
I believe that artists are the thermometers for society and that we
have to give them a voice in real time (and not in delay, before it is
too late).
Politicians use visual communication more and more. The visual artist
is a specialist in decoding and synthesising visual material and is
strongly able to bring us a new version of what is really going on – as
he/she is a visual expert.
Political decisions are made fast and it is important that the
contemporary art structure allows the artist to take part in the actual
debate and compete with the ultra speed of the news.
This is why I believe that art institutions should open ‘Emergency
Rooms’, where artists can arrive in the morning and exhibit immediately
i.e. the way he/she reads the newspapers. I am sure that some evidence
or even human sensuality will be brought into focus for the visitors of
museums.
I am convinced that artists have some ‘evidence’ about the world today
– evidence that we should also have a chance to look at.
Artists in society play the role of bringing back the debate on human
values (and not always those in media strategies). He/she also has the
role of being a sensitive observant of society’s mechanisms. The
Emergency Rooms have to take place in public institutions like museums
because the opinions of the artists are of public interest.
We need the artist’s comments now. Let us give them spaces to show us
what they think about today’s news, i.e. the war.
Thierry Geoffroy / Colonel/Cph 18/02/2003.
www.colonel.dk