Secession

The Otolith Group

What the Owl Knows

18 Nov 2022 - 05 Feb 2023

The Otolith Group, What the Owl Knows, installation view, Secession 2022, photo: Iris Ranzinger
The Otolith Group, What the Owl Knows, installation view, Secession 2022, photo: Iris Ranzinger
The Otolith Group, What the Owl Knows, installation view, Secession 2022, photo: Iris Ranzinger
The Otolith Group, What the Owl Knows, installation view, Secession 2022, photo: Iris Ranzinger
The Otolith Group, What the Owl Knows, installation view, Secession 2022, photo: Iris Ranzinger
The Otolith Group, What the Owl Knows, installation view, Secession 2022, photo: Iris Ranzinger
The Otolith Group, What the Owl Knows, installation view, Secession 2022, photo: Iris Ranzinger
The Otolith Group, What the Owl Knows, 2022
The Secession is delighted to announce What the Owl Knows, the solo exhibition of The Otolith Group named after the new moving image work directed by the artists. The post-cinematic practice of Kodwo Eshun and Anjalika Sagar is informed by an attention to an aesthetics of the essayistic that takes the form of a science fiction of the present that seeks to dramatise the interscalar catastrophes of the Racial Capitalocene.

The artists’ preoccupation with rearranging the intertemporal relationships between past, present and future often departs from the existing works of composers, producers, musicians, poets, theorists, and painters. The approaches to sound heard in the works of figures such as Julius Eastman, Codona, Drexciya, Etel Adnan, Una Marson, Denise Ferreira da Silva and Rabindranath Tagore imply a range of artistic methods for rethinking the force, mass and motion of images.

This way of hearing across media allows Eshun and Sagar to visit and revisit a sonic practice of image-making which invites audiences to listen to video as a choreography of images in motion. Such an approach asks audiences to encounter the present as a historical experience projected from the horizon of an expectant future. In The Third Part of the Third Measure (2017), to name only one of several such works, The Otolith Group redirects the temporal structure of the past by staging the music of composer Julius Eastman from the perspective of a future that confronts contemporary audiences with the militant figure of the gay guerrilla.

What the Owl Knows emerges from an enduring friendship between painter and writer Lynette Yiadom-Boakye, Sagar and Eshun. The mutual admiration between the three Londoners provides a precondition for a work that aims to affirm the oblique affiliations within, between and across media. Traditional documentary and contemporary television, like contemporary museums and galleries, tend to seek the motivation of the painter as a public figure in the search for psychological insight.

In contrast, the work of Eshun and Sagar could be said to be motivated by the desire to frustrate the demand from institutions for biographical explanation. This enduring desire to frustrate institutional demands for explication reaches a certain crescendo in What the Owl Knows, a work subtended by the ambition to displace the biographical imperative that informs the histories of cinema’s encounter with painting.

To watch What the Owl Knows is to grasp the extent to which The Otolith Group seek to protect the work of painting from exposure and preserve the presence of the painter from the revelation promised by the camera. What the Owl Knows aims at disarticulating the work of painting. It revels in what it does not reveal. It lingers on details, tarries with fragments and labours on the negative work of decomposing the incremental accretion of the compositional process. It studies Yiadom-Boakye as she studies specific sections within a canvas whose extent we cannot see, ponders her next move, weighs the gravity of adjacent chromaticity and registers the shifting balance of chromatic forces.

What animates What the Owl Knows is an ambition to shift the focus of attention away from the painter, as an object of attention, towards the quality of attention bestowed upon the paint by the painter. What the Owl Knows aspires towards a poetics of recursion in which an audience pays attention to the ways in which digital video pays attention to the ways in which a painter pays attention to what she paints.

The attention to the recursive duets with a series of scenes in which Yiadom-Boakye appears as a singular figure, a silhouette under sodium light, unbeholden to the camera, circumnavigating wildernesses of urban London selected for their specific yet undisclosed significance. As Yiadom-Boakye reads from her poems, each of which have been restructured for and by video, a restricted economy of introspective expressionism takes hold of the mise-en-scene.

Suspending documentary cinema’s demand for explanation, it becomes apparent, opens an abyss in meaning that allows for a heightened state of intimation and implication through video’s recourse to the aberrant drama of poetic language. The oscillation between the intimacy of the interior studio and the drama of the exterior setting takes on the structure of a feeling whose interplay gestures towards video’s powers of assembly. In its encounter between painting and poetry, video’s movement from day to night carries Yiadom-Boakye’s night-thoughts from light to dark and back again. To listen to the light of night is to hear the night of day. It is to sense the ceremony of video as it invokes a convocation between the immortality of painting, the dead of poetry and the life of the voice.

The Otolith Group’s attention to the displacement of expectation makes itself felt in the animated allegory that appears at the midpoint of What the Owl Knows. In the animated fable between an Owl and a Pigeon inspired by Eshun and Sagar’s reading of Yiadom-Boakye’s text Plans of the Night, the Pigeon can be understood as the engineer of its own demise hoist by its own petard.

Text by The Otolith Group

The Otolith Group
What the Owl Knows, 2022
HD video, colour, sound
Projection screen, seating
55 minutes 7 seconds

Programmed by the board of the Secession
Curated by Bettina Spörr
 

Tags: The Otolith Group, Bettina Spörr