Went to the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art today, 40 km's north of Copenhagen. Well…
Sophie Calle’s algorithms
Went to De Pont last saturday to see Sophie Calle’s ‘talking to strangers’ exhibition. Somehow the De Pont museum has a knack of doing interesting one-to-ones; their setup makes me feel as if I have just met someone interesting for the first time.
It was the first time I saw Sophie Calle’s work ‘for real’. Although she’s been one of my greats for a number of years I’d seen her work via the Internet only. Which is a medium that suits her work, it being text + foto based. Better in real life though, impressive to see with what meticulousness her work is presented. For example ‘Prenez soin de vous’ : beautiful big colour prints of all her respondents, their texts enlarged and framed with care. They really fill up a space with their presence. Question: why is it that all the women in her pictures are beautiful? Question: why was it that the text her mother wrote was the only one that was illegible? I knew what it was her mother writes to her: “knowing you, you will find a way to turn this breakdown in your life into art”. She (the mother) was right: even her deathbed was on one of the walls. Don’t yet know what I think about that …. Will have to visit this work again.
I read somewhere that Calle has a need for ‘receipes’, that she cannot very well handle life unless she can apply some rule to it. This I could trace in almost all of her work – it has an algorithmic quality. She’d have made a great computer programmer … Take for example ‘The Gotham Handbook (1998), where Calle followed a receipe for her behaviour set out by filmmaker Paul Auster, who challenged her to adopt, beautify and maintain a public amenity in New York. Calle adopted a telephone booth, decorated it, cleaned it and used it as a base to hand out smiles, cigarettes, sanwiches & suchlike.
Next to the photographs, he displays ‘results of the operation: 125 smiles given for 72 received; 1 shared burst of laughter; 22 sandwiches accepted for 10 refused; 8 packs of cigarettes accepted for 0 refused; 154 minutes of conversation’. Obsessiveness, well written about and meticulously presented.
I post two pictures of ‘The Sleepers (1980), just to show how very precise is her documentation and how well, in her case, text and images work together. For 8 days she invited friends, friends of friends and total strangers to sleep in her bed, photographing them every hour. Photos and text alternate and work with each other to re-create an event that explored intimacy, public/private boundaries and pure cheek.
Question: Would any of the people she asks for participation ever have slapped her face?
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