
Client (detail)
Morag Keil
2024
Installation with desk, chair, laptop, mouse, keyboard, artist's website, platform, mannequin legs, sinks, chain, trays, obs boards, dimensions variable.
Courtesy the artist and Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin / Photo © Graysc
Art & Alienation is the last exhibition curated by Nicolas Brulhart at Friart, where he has been artistic director for the past 6 years. The exhibition revisits a general approach to art and its critical potential in a capitalist society. It also focuses on the figure of the artist as a model of the creative personality.
Over Friart’s three floors, each artist occupies a separate room, reinforcing the isolation thematic at the heart of the exhibition. This spatial fragmentation, which takes the visitor from room to room, generates an almost labyrinthine experience: each threshold opens onto a distinct environment, conducive to surprise, intimacy and even a form of meditation on the singularity of art.
“The more labor is de-personalised and abstracted, the more it appears as creative and personalized.”1
What form might a work of art take that seeks to convey something of this sense of alienation in the present? Art & Alienation brings together more or less recent works by 8 artists, most of whom live in Europe. Each artist presents extracts from what is often experimental and in-flux practice. These singular universes mask a shared idea: artistic practice is also always a critique of production. Artistic creation always already comes into being alienated in capital’s abstraction. The irresolvable contradictions on the social, creative and economic horizon of art only reach resolution in negation.
In the exhibition, the abrasive dimension of existence is inscribed in forms of deskilling, economic insecurity and détournement. False equivalences and errors of the mind haunt this exploration of a subject as old as the idea of modernity itself.
1: Benjamin Noys, The Persistence of the Negative, 2012