NEW YORK, NY.- How to do art in times of war, destruction, violence, anger, hate, resentment? What kind of art should be done in moments of darkness and desperation? Can art be a tool for understanding historys changes? Can a work of art draw alternative forms of understanding the world? How to continue working - as an artist - and in doing so, avoid falling into the traps of facts, journalism, and comments? I want to ask myself these questions and above all, I want to create, with my work, a surface of reflection. I dont pretend to resolve or offer solutions, but I want my work Fake it, Fake it - till you Fake it. to contribute to this problematic, as a form cutting a break-through in the analog into the digital.
To work in the real world and for the real world is the commitment. I want to make a plastic affirmation which poses the problematic of how an analog, real exhibition space can be combined with the digital and virtual world. I want to keep my work in its analog mode, in conflict with the digital, therefore reflecting the friction and clash of the real into the virtual. Of course its never about ignoring the digital or the virtual because their enormous transformation and far-reaching consequences have created on our coexistence and communicational behavior a kind of fake-utopian-turning point. I am trying to challenge - throughout my work - this fake-utopian idea. I call it fake-utopian and not dystopian. A dystopian idea is an idea originally utopian, that was unintentionally transformed by mistake or default, into dystopia. But here, the fake-utopian idea is an idea that deliberately doesnt admit its fakeness and never believes in its utopian dimension. This is what I want to work out, in faking myself with self-irony, modesty, silliness, and headlessness.
I have been following with much interest the Silicon Valley cliché-credo Fake it, till you make it! and I include myself in this cliché-credo, because am I not - are we not all trying to do so? I too, want to fake it, fake it so much, so long and far, that things don't lie any more. Because fake is not the problem, lying is the problem. I do not want to lie, I do not want things to lie. When someone in the subway is asking for money and making signs as a deaf person - perhaps the signs are fake, but the person is not faking his or her need of money, so - there is no lie.
The form of the work Fake it, Fake it - till you Fake it. is precarious, its a Precarious Sculpture. In working the form out only in cardboard, from fake computers to fake credit cards, I want to insist on the importance of the material-decision in its plastic dimension, and on the artists agreement to pay the price for a decision which always is an artistic one. The question is: How can a precarious-form be offered through an enveloping, quickly done, poorly worked-out sculpture? And how can a form that interrogates the influence and compliance of digital-consumerism and questions fake-utopian results, be asserted?
-Thomas Hirschhorn, Aubervilliers 2023
Gladstone Gallery
Thomas Hirschhorn: Fake it, Fake it till you Fake it.
January 24th, 2024 - March 2nd, 2024