Doomsday Celebration
16 Feb - 23 Mar 2007
DOOMSDAY CELEBRATION
Vito Acconci
Jay Chung
Maurice Girodias
Gardar Eide Einarsson
Curated by Thomas Boutoux and Oscar Tuazon
Feb 16 – March 23, 2007
Opening: Thurday, February 15, from 6 to 10
A project that went too far, got out of hand, completely fucked up your life. If you could describe it (you can't) anyway who would believe you, no one else could understand, what would be the point? For a particular kind of disastrous confusion of fiction and reality, there's nothing to communicate--
Leave a message. A funny/pathetic sheet of emergency instructions, found on the Anti-Defamation League website, reprinted as a poster by Gardar Eide Einarsson, acts as a kind of standard 'last words': a useless backup plan, plan B, the 6 P's... In 1970, Vito Acconci had two girlfriends. He tried to make an art project out of it, and this is what's left: an aborted piece: a couple of pages torn from a diary, documents of an impossible, deranged, satanic project. Finally, maybe there just isn't much to say? Jay Chung sends an invitation to a party we weren't invited to, or that never happened. "Comment un livre peut précipiter son éditeur dans la déchéance totale"-- the story of a man playing a tragic character in his own autobiography, more book than man, Maurice Girodias.
But that's the risk, isn't it?— you wrote yourself as a character in your own biography, now live it...
It's after hours at the gallery—the roll down door is closed, the heating is off and it's cold, it's dark. A private viewing, a small party, a funeral. Come in through the back door, if you can find it, and down the dark hallway/pissoir. The final show, retirement party, closing up shop, going out of business sale, nothing more to say: we are going into business.
castillo/corrales is a new collectively-organized commercial gallery based in Paris-Belleville. Conceived as an 'empty room' to stage the various activities of a group of artists, curators, critics and writers, each month the gallery presents a thematic project. Reflecting the multiple purposes of the space, the exhibition program combines original artworks, commissioned limited-edition projects, and selected books and objects. Organized as a series of chapters, beginning with the final exhibition and working backwards, each project obliquely reveals the preceding one.
Vito Acconci
Jay Chung
Maurice Girodias
Gardar Eide Einarsson
Curated by Thomas Boutoux and Oscar Tuazon
Feb 16 – March 23, 2007
Opening: Thurday, February 15, from 6 to 10
A project that went too far, got out of hand, completely fucked up your life. If you could describe it (you can't) anyway who would believe you, no one else could understand, what would be the point? For a particular kind of disastrous confusion of fiction and reality, there's nothing to communicate--
Leave a message. A funny/pathetic sheet of emergency instructions, found on the Anti-Defamation League website, reprinted as a poster by Gardar Eide Einarsson, acts as a kind of standard 'last words': a useless backup plan, plan B, the 6 P's... In 1970, Vito Acconci had two girlfriends. He tried to make an art project out of it, and this is what's left: an aborted piece: a couple of pages torn from a diary, documents of an impossible, deranged, satanic project. Finally, maybe there just isn't much to say? Jay Chung sends an invitation to a party we weren't invited to, or that never happened. "Comment un livre peut précipiter son éditeur dans la déchéance totale"-- the story of a man playing a tragic character in his own autobiography, more book than man, Maurice Girodias.
But that's the risk, isn't it?— you wrote yourself as a character in your own biography, now live it...
It's after hours at the gallery—the roll down door is closed, the heating is off and it's cold, it's dark. A private viewing, a small party, a funeral. Come in through the back door, if you can find it, and down the dark hallway/pissoir. The final show, retirement party, closing up shop, going out of business sale, nothing more to say: we are going into business.
castillo/corrales is a new collectively-organized commercial gallery based in Paris-Belleville. Conceived as an 'empty room' to stage the various activities of a group of artists, curators, critics and writers, each month the gallery presents a thematic project. Reflecting the multiple purposes of the space, the exhibition program combines original artworks, commissioned limited-edition projects, and selected books and objects. Organized as a series of chapters, beginning with the final exhibition and working backwards, each project obliquely reveals the preceding one.