Yngve Holen's largest institutional show to date on view at Kunsthalle Basel
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Yngve Holen's largest institutional show to date on view at Kunsthalle Basel
Yngve Holen, Installation view VERTICALSEAT , view on CAKE, 2016 and Window seat 10 – 21 A, 2016, Kunsthalle Basel, 2016. Photo: Philipp Hänger.



BASEL.- The human body, it is often said, is conspicuously absent in the work of the Norwegian German artist Yngve Holen (b. 1982). Yet everywhere in his oeuvre, the implications of the body—its subjectivity, messy corporeality, and imbrications in a culture of consumption—are evoked. Disemboweled washing machines, bisected water coolers, MRI-scanned and 3D-printed smashed cell phones: Holen has used them all in previous works. His predilection for things that are at one remove from the humans who make, buy, or use them is shaped by an interest in the technologies that define our everyday surroundings, from transportation and plastic surgery to industrial food production and security systems. In VERTICALSEAT, his largest institutional show to date, Holen presents an array of new objects that magnify the corporeal questioning that sits at the heart of his practice.

VERTICALSEAT refers to the eponymous standing chair (although back support with a seat belt might better describe it) that budget airlines are lobbying to introduce in order to transport more people in a reduced amount of space. The scheme speaks to one of the many ways society’s stratification of wealth and power continues to have concrete implications for the body. Holen’s work points to the connections between the proliferation of new technologies and our ever more ironclad cultures of control.

ROOM 1
The exhibition opens with a series of works made from fences typically used to protect the well-off (their homes, airports, borders) from foreign intruders. Titled VERTICALSEAT, like the exhibition itself, they announce from the start Holen’s preoccupation with human boundaries—physical and perceptual, but also financial and ethical. They also engage with a number of artistic traditions, from the geometric grids and industrial polish of Minimalism to the legacy of the readymade, and even the conventions of display of large-scale painting.

ROOM 2
The fences of the previous room give way to the artist’s appropriations of autobus and scooter headlights. The wall-mounted lights suggest both the gaze of anthropomorphic yet alien eyes and surveillance technologies. Cannibalizing everyday objects may be Holen’s method, but the act always underscores the way these things reflect our needs and anxieties, including the desire to intentionally design resonances between machines and our own bodies.

ROOM 3
At the midpoint of the exhibition, the body appears with a directness that Holen ordinarily eschews. For the room-filling installation, he collaborated with Aedrhlsomrs Othryutupt Lauecehrofn (b. 1986), whose various names are part of the Norwegian- born artist-musician’s strategy. Born Lars Holdhus, he legally changed his name to Lars The Contemporary Future Holdhus, or TCF, and finally to Aedrhlsomrs Othryutupt Lauecehrofn, or AOL, as part of his work exploring technology, artificial intelligence, and human interaction. Together Holen and AOL extend a project that the latter began in 2015, documenting the vocal chords of different individuals through sound, MRI, and 3D printing technologies. The result is an uncanny installation in which digital prints of the faces and vocal chords of the two artists communicate, transmitting a composition created with the recorded sounds of each saying “A” and “O” (the two vowels that, when spoken, create the most dissonant forms in one’s vocal chords).

ROOM 4
Here Holen expands a series of works that he began in 2015. They are made using the facades of CT scanners, machines that create tomographic images from computer-processed X-rays, allowing doctors to see inside bodies without cutting them open. Holen’s versions are produced using the industrial tooling for the Siemens SOMATOM Force model, except that his are painted in colors that the commodity industry uses to emphasize diversity and “choice” (Race Red, Black Sand Pearl). The surfaces of these newest works in the series have been sliced open at the sides—subjected to the very act that medical imaging machines are meant to make unnecessary—and painted in the light ivory (RAL color number 1015) of German taxicabs. Again transport is at stake, as well as the class and labor implications of a society in which there are those who drive and those who get driven.

ROOM 5
Hand-blown colored glass works introduced on one wall of the previous room continue here. Evoking the nazar amulet that is believed to ward off the “evil eye,” the glassworks have been cut into the shape of Boeing Dreamliner windows and mounted on steel supports. Combining the handmade (a product of a blower’s breath) and the industrially formed (copies of airplane window frames), as well as a superstitious object dating from antiquity and the aviation industry’s most innovative window design, Holen’s project is a study in contradictions. If boundaries, protection, the body, and transport come together again in this series, the amulet reference reflects the critical bite at the center of Holen’s practice. Common in societies with persistent inequality, the nazar is a superstitious object thought to help manage class anxiety and economic asymmetry. It is designed to protect against destructive envy, but is also a symbol of the fear produced by inequality.

Occupying the center of the space is CAKE, a large-scale sculpture made from the ultimate object of desire for the nuclear family that also craves luxury and speed: the Porsche Panamera. The vehicle is cleaved in four like a cake distributed into equal shares, thus continuing Holen’s serial dissection of objects that populate our everyday. The gesture is apparently simple (in reality, it required an impressive technical feat), but startling for the way it reveals the seemingly sentient “mortality” of something thought of as wholly inanimate—only a machine. The resulting object, splayed and totally inoperable, sits with a strange splendor. Its engine, split leather seats, cracked windows, and other mechanisms visible, the car appears like a specimen of an extinct creature. The equal yet useless division of such a luxury asset provokes the question: Is it possible to redistribute resources in a world of increasing inequality?

Holen’s is a peculiar form of cultural anthropology. Throughout the exhibition, industrial objects, inhuman in their futuristic sheen, are sliced open or represented in ways that raise questions about how humans and the human-made reconfigure each other in our age of technological acceleration. Comprised entirely of newly commissioned works, the exhibition highlights the artist’s different approaches to thinking about the object and its absent but implicit human users.

Yngve Holen was born in 1982 in Braunschweig, DE; he lives and works in Berlin.










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