LONDON.- On 26 November the
Whitechapel Gallery unveiled a new site-specific commission by French Algerian artist Kader Attia. The work revisits the biblical story of Jacobs ladder with a towering floor to ceiling structure of rare artefacts and books that fill the lofty spaces of the Gallery.
Hidden inside this library is a cabinet of curiosities filled with items from old scientific measuring devices to books by authors such as the philosopher Descartes and biologist Alfred Russel Wallace. At the centre of the work, a beam of light shines up to a mirrored ceiling creating an infinity reflection in an evocation of the tale which describes prophet Jacobs vision of angels ascending from earth to heaven.
Kader Attias (b.1970) multi-media installations reflect on anthropology, politics and science and are rooted in history and archival research. His works explore ideas around identity in an age of globalisation and are informed by the experience of growing up between Algeria and the Parisian suburbs, and later living in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Venezuela.
Continuum of the Repair: the Light of Jacob's Ladder (2013), is on display until November 2014 in Gallery 2, a dedicated space for sitespecific works of art. It is the result of an in-depth engagement with a space that is steeped with history as the reading room of a former library. The commission looks at the idea of books and objects as receptacles of history, continuously carrying memories with them.
The installation is the latest chapter in Kader Attias research into the concept of repair, which he sees as an underlying principle of development and evolution in science and religion. As Attia says the biggest illusion of the Human Mind is probably the one on which Man has built himself: the idea that he invents something, when all he does is repair. This concept began with Attias work The Repair from Occident to Extra Occidental Cultures (2012), presented at the international art survey dOCUMENTA (13), Kassel, Germany. In the last year, he has examined repair in relation to both nature and culture at a solo exhibition at KunstWerke, Berlin (2013), and for the Whitechapel Gallery commission he takes science and religion as his central focus.
Past works by Kader Attia include Ghost (2006), a metallic phantom army resembling kneeling figures in prayer, or Untitled (Ghardaïa) (2009), a scale model of an ancient North African town made from couscous. For the Sydney Biennale in 2010, Attia created Kasbah (2009) in which visitors were invited to walk across an installation of corrugated aluminium and timber roofs, suggestive of a cramped shanty town.