[aha] 01_Davis_Untitled_2010 at the MINI Museum
Domenico Quaranta
qrndnc a yahoo.it
Mar 25 Gen 2011 13:05:31 UTC
The MINI Museum of XXI Century Arts is proud to announce
“01_Davis_Untitled_2010”, the first site-specific work commissioned
for its revolutionary exhibition space to the London-based artist Paul
B. Davis.
The first artist to be featured at the MINI Museum, Davis decided to
exploit this extraordinary opportunity to turn his interest in circuit
bending and hacking systems into a form of “institutional critique”.
When you turn it on, if there is no memory card inserted, the MINI
Museum displays a default screensaver featuring three kitschy
landscape images set, for some mysterious reasons, somewhere in
Greece. Davis opened the device to see if it was possible to get those
images out of it; but when he realized that, beyond its glamorous
surface, the MINI Museum is actually a piece of «ghetto chinese
engineering», he decided to simply take photos of the Museum when it
displayed those demo images. Then he made «a screwed and chopped remix
of Manuel Göttsching's seminal proto-techno track E2-E4» (1984) and he
copied both the track and the photos on the USB pen drive. The final
result has been documented here: http://vimeo.com/19122996. According
to Davis, «the behaviour of the device in its “default” state is
almost identical to this except for some differences in the image
quality which you can notice on close inspection, and of course Manuel
Göttsching.»
«It is exactly what I was expecting from Paul, but still it's a
surprise», Domenico Quaranta, the MINI Museum Director, declared. «He
could have easily uploaded a version of his wonderful compression
videos, but he decided to make a comment on the Museum as both an
institution and a piece of crappy technology. With his minimal
intervention, he turned the original screensaver - a beautiful example
of the vernacular images displayed by default on consumer
technologies, from computers to cell phones - into art, hinting back
at appropriation art of the eighties in an absolutely modern, post
internet fashion.» According to Quaranta, «“01_Davis_Untitled_2010”
also works as a tip for the artists who will come next, on the way to
approach the MINI Museum.»
Up to now, “01_Davis_Untitled_2010” has been shown in a private
exhibition in Room 3148 of the Los Angeles Airport Hilton Hotel in
December 2010. A public show will be announced soon.
A founder member of the BEIGE Programming Ensemble together with Joe
Beuckman, Cory Arcangel and Joseph Bonn, Paul B. Davis lives and works
in London, UK. In the late 90s he pioneered the use of hacked video
game cartridges as an art practice. According to Paul Pieroni, «while
the materials utilised are ready-made, the use principle is entirely
hand crafted; Davis altering the existing code while adding nothing
new.» He has exhibited internationally and his work is represented by
Seventeen Gallery, London. A recent interview for “The Creators
Project” can be found here: http://www.thecreatorsproject.com/en-uk/creators/paul-b-davis--2
The MINI Museum of XXI Century Arts (also known as MMAXXI) is a 7''
digital photo frame bought on eBay equipped with a 4GB pen drive.
Founded and directed by Domenico Quaranta, the MINI Museum will travel
from node to node around a network of artists, and will host temporary
solo shows by the artist owning it at the time.
Paul's MINI Museum tutorial: http://www.beigerecords.com/paul/minimuseum/
More informations: http://www.theminimuseum.org/
Stay updated: http://blog.theminimuseum.org/
---
Domenico Quaranta
web. http://domenicoquaranta.com/
email. info at domenicoquaranta.com
mob. +39 340 2392478
skype. dom_40
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