<nettime> NAME Readymade at Location One, NYC

Aksioma on Tue, 5 May 2009 14:38:18 +0200 (CEST)


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<nettime> NAME Readymade at Location One, NYC


NAME Readymade
Janez Jansa, Janez Jansa, Janez Jansa
Location One
26 Greene Street, New York NY 10013
Thursday, May 7, 2009 7pm
For more information see:
http://location1.org/janez-jansa-name-readymade
Can you imagine a few years ago 3 established American artists 
joining the Republican Party and then legally changing their names to 
George W. Bush? And then bringing the name of the US President to 
museums, exhibiting next to Robert Gober or Barbara Kruger, 
festivals, showing work next to Meg Stuart and Nature Theater of 
Oklahoma, galleries, presenting video alongside Bruce Nauman?
Location One is pleased to host NAME Readymade, a presentation of the 
"Name changing" gesture perpetrated by three Slovenian artists who, 
in 2007 officially changed their names to the Slovenia's economic- 
liberal, conservative prime minister at the time, Janez Jansa.
All Janez Jansas' works, their private and public affairs, in a word 
their whole life has been conducted under this name ever since.
Janez Jansa at Location One will take you through a series of 
artistic, political, administrative and media actions performed by 
himself together with Janez Jansa and Janez Jansa with a particular 
focus on their latest personal exhibition entitled NAME Readymade.
Works exhibited in this show (valid ID cards, passports, credit and 
bank cards, driving licences, birth and marriage certificates, and so 
on) are generated by the reality itself.
"When the three artists changed their names to Janez Jansa, they in 
fact adopted a critical stand to the state. To the Slovene 
government, in which until recently all posts seemed occupied as it 
were by a single person - Janez Jansa. [...] Through the 
multiplication of Janez Jansa's name, the function of the prime 
minister has assumed, within this specific artistic action, a similar 
position as the Campbell soup cans in Andy Warhol's works." (Zdenka 
Badovinac, Name Readymade, October 2008)
"(...) the gesture is???from now on???in constant process: it will be 
semiotised in connection with their every new work of art and public 
appearance, therefore it will take some turns unprecedented in other 
known forms of subversive affirmation." (Rok Vevar, Vecer, September 
1st 2007)
Janez Jansa, Janez Jansa and Janez Jansa cut right in the midst of 
their own realities and the reality of the space and time, in which 
they work. For this purpose they used procedures typical for art - 
transformation, translation, representation and mimicry. They turned 
around the classical relational scheme between art and life as it was 
developed in the 20th century. Art in previous century is redefined 
by way of reality entering into artistic contexts without mediation 
(so that Badiou can define the 20th century as the passion for the 
real), while Jansa, Jansa and Jansa want to achieve the opposite so 
that their methods cut deeply into their material lives and the lives 
of their immediate surrounding.
???The use of personal documents as exhibition items is certainly a 
liminal case; it probes certain boundaries. It is liminal in that it 
is not clear whether or not such a use of personal documents respects 
the rights that you acquired when you were issued these documents. 
You cannot burn documents as this is a criminal offence, but what 
about the use of documents for artistic purposes? To be sure, this is 
not something that serious people would use to justify persecution in 
the name of the state; yet, this does mean that everybody knows that 
you are not carrying your documents, that is, that you are not using 
them in compliance with the conditions under which they were issued 
to you. Even a bank can cancel your cards if they find out that you 
are using them in an inappropriate way. You are walking a line that I 
would not call ???dangerous???, but I do, however, consider it 
suspicious. This is precisely part of the risk that I mentioned 
before. Here, we can see various things that could develop from this. 
After all, you have to make a special effort to find out how security 
is going to work at the exhibition. It is an entirely different thing 
if you exhibit graphics numbered 1 to 100 that are insured through an 
insurance company. I doubt that an insurance company would issue an 
insurance policy for the everyday functional value of the exhibited 
documents in the same way as they would issue tourist insurance - 
such insurance would require the issuance of new documents. 
Furthermore, it is also interesting that these documents are art 
works, readymades. The original of Fountain has been lost, nicked, so 
Duchamp made new ones, signed them anew, he even made a miniature 
version for his little suitcase; you, however, cannot make new 
documents, they can only be made by an authorized organization called 
the state and its Ministry of Internal Affairs. Yet the Ministry 
itself cannot function illegally and, for example, reproduce these 
documents as art works. Now what? These are works of art only insofar 
as they are also authentic documents. Here we reach a contradiction - 
the very contradiction of the world of art. A readymade as a work of 
art is something inauthentic; it is the proof of inauthenticity: with 
a readymade, the ???aura??? disappears. In your case, however, the 
precondition for this readymade is its authenticity in everyday life 
- its credibility and authenticity. If somebody bought this work of 
art, they would be buying it as authenticity, together with its 
functional ???readymade??? value.??? (Lev Kreft, Name as Readymade, 
An interview with Janez Jansa, Janez Jansa and Janez Jansa, NAME 
Readymade, October 2008)
www.aksioma.org/interview_kreft.html
NAME Readymade - THE BOOK
Museum of Modern Art Ljubljana, Oct. 2008 (208 pp., english)
www.aksioma.org/name_book
The book is a parcours through different stages and aspects of the 
act of name changing. It also brings different writings on the recent 
work by Janez Jansa, Janez Jansa and Janez Jansa. The book is 
structured in 2 parts: essays on name changing by experts in the 
field and documents and writings on different actions and projects by 
Jansa, Jansa and Jansa.
Rich visual material makes this book an unique document of the work 
that has provoked wide range of interpretation in artistic as well as 
in general audience.
Contributors: Amelia Jones, Catherine Soussloff, Zdenka Badovinac, 
Antonio Caronia, Janez Jansa, Janez Jansa, Janez Jansa, Tadej 
Kovacic, Jela Krecic, Lev Kreft, Blaz Lukan, Aldo Milohnic, Misko 
Suvakovic.
Production: Aksioma - Institute for Contemporary Art, Ljubljana
Supported by the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Slovenia and 
the Municipality of Ljubljana
Contact:
Marcela Okreti??
Aksioma - Institute for Contemporary Art, Ljubljana
Neubergerjeva 25, SI-1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia
gsm: +386 41 250830
e-mail: aksioma4@siol.net
www.aksioma.org
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