Tag Archives: Renate Lorenz

PAULINE BOUDRY AND RENATE LORENZ — MOVING BACKWARDS

We do not feel represented by our governments and do not agree with decisions taken in our name. We witness European nations building giant walls and fences around borders that already didn’t seem useful in the first place, rejecting rescue ships at the harbors. Philosopher Achille Mbembe speaks of the “Society of Enmity.” Queer scholar José Esteban Munoz calls the here and now a “prison house.” People stop using gender neutral language and move from their polyamorous groups into traditional families. Hate speech not only seems acceptable, but becomes a motor of aggressively arresting us into what is considered a normal life. Do you sometimes feel as if you are massively being forced to move backwards?

We have, of course, no recipe. But after taking a deep breath we are up for turning disadvantage into a tool: Let’s collectively move backwards…

Women of the Kurdish guerrillas wore their shoes the wrong way round to walk from one place in the snowy mountains to the other. This tactic saved their lives. It seems as if you are walking backwards, but actually you are walking forwards. Or the other way around.

Let’s take this story as a starting point for the project: Can we use the tactical ambivalence of this movement as a means of coming together, re-organizing our desires, and finding ways of exercising freedoms? Can its feigned backwardness even fight the notion of progress’ inevitability?

We will move backwards and think about the ways in which we wish to live with loved but also unloved others. We will move backwards, because strange encounters might be a pleasant starting point for something unforeseen to happen. — Renate and Pauline

This weekend, Joan presents the United States premiere of Pauline Boudry and Renate Lorenz’ 2019 Venice Biennale video installation MOVING BACKWARDS.

The Venice iteration in the Swiss Pavilion—curated by Charlotte Laubard—incarnated a nightclub environment, and the opening weekend in Los Angeles will feature a live performance by Marbles Jumbo Radio.

PAULINE BOUDRY and RENATE LORENZ—MOVING BACKWARDS

Opening Night

Saturday, December 7, from 7 pm.

PAULINE BOUDRY and RENATE LORENZ IN CONVERSATION WITH ANNE ELLEGOOD

Sunday, December 8, at 4 pm.

Performances

Opening Night at 7 pm and Sunday, December 8, from noon to 4 pm.

Joan

1206 Maple Avenue, suite 715, downtown Los Angeles.

In addition to Marbles Jumbo Radio, performers in the video include Julie Cunningham, Werner Hirsch, Latifa Laâbissi, and Nach.

The MOVING BACKWARDS exhibition catalog is available from Skira.

Pauline Boudry and Renate Lorenz, Moving Backwards, 2019, installation and performance photographs from the 58th Venice Biennale, Swiss Pavilion. Images courtesy and © the artists, the photographers, the performers, la Biennale di Venezia, and Skira.

A GRAMMAR BUILT WITH ROCKS

A GRAMMAR BUILT WITH ROCKS—a two-part group exhibition at Human Resources and ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives at the USC Libraries, curated by Shoghig Halajian and Suzy Halajian—“presents artistic practices that trace the racialized and gendered relationship between bodies and land, and question narratives of socioecological crisis that contribute to the displacement and erasure of people and collective formations.

“The project appropriates its title from Édouard Glissant’s writingsas it looks to the ways in which the landscape contains, unfolds, and narrates its own history.”*

In a related program, Jumana Manna’s WILD RELATIVES (2018) will screen at Redcat in December.

A GRAMMAR BUILT WITH ROCKS

Through November 4.

Human Resources, 410 Cottage Home Street, Chinatown, Los Angeles.

 

Through December 22.

ONE National Gay and Lesbian Archives at the USC Libraries*

909 West Adams Boulevard, Los Angeles.
.
Monday, December 10, at 8:30 pm.
Redcat, 631 West 2nd Street, downtown Los Angeles.
Top: Cauleen SmithRemote Viewing, 2009, video still, 15:13 min. Courtesy of the artist, Corbett vs. Dempsey, Chicago, and Kate Werble Gallery, New York.
Above: Film still from Wild Relatives, directed by Jumana Manna. Image courtesy the artist and Redcat.
Below: Pauline Boudry and Renate LorenzToxic, 2012. Installation with Super 16mm film / HD, 13 minutes and archive. Courtesy the artists.