Christoph Schlingensief, Production still, The African Twin Towers, 2005, © Aino Laberenz.

Regarding the Practice and Authorship of the Double Agents

ICA
The Mall
London
020-7930-0493
Double Agent,
Pawel Althamer / Nowolipie Group, Phil Collins,
Dora García,
Donelle Woolford, Christoph Schlingensief, Barbara Visser,
Artur Zmijewski

February 14-April 6, 2008

Double Agent is a group exhibition featuring artists who use other people as a medium. The works raise questions of performance and authorship, and particularly issues arising when the artist is not central in his or her work, but operates through individuals, communities and surrogates. The show contains works in a variety of media, including video and live performance — works that are often slippery in meaning or disquieting in effect. The exhibition tours to three venues in the UK, and includes British premieres of a number of significant works, as well as new commissions specific to each venue.

A number of the works in Double Agent explore the ethics of performance and representation, including power relations involved in using non-professional subjects. Artist, filmmaker and theatre director Christoph Schlingensief (German, born 1960 in Oberhausen, lives in Berlin) is represented by a video installation using footage the artist gathered in 2005 as part of his project The African Twin Towers — the story of a megalomaniac theatre director trying to stage the 9-11 story in Namibia, shot on location with a cast of locals as well as Schlingensief’s regular "family" of performers.

Another artist to explore the ethics of representation is Artur Zmijewski (Polish, born 1966 in Warsaw, lives in Warsaw). In his video Them (2007) he contrives a series of confrontations between Christians, Jews, Young Socialists, and Polish nationalists; the tensions build between the groups and culminate in an explosive impasse. Phil Collins (English, born in 1970 Runcorn, lives in Glasgow) shows images from you’ll never work in this town again (2004-ongoing), a series of photographic portraits of curators, critics and others in the art world — photographed on the understanding that their image would be taken immediately after slapping them.

Other works were made by — or feature — figures who operate as extensions for the artist. The works of Pawel Althamer (Polish, born 1967 in Warsaw, lives in Warsaw) are frequently based on his identification with marginal subjects. For many years he has led a ceramics class for an organisation in Warsaw called the Nowolipie Group, for adults with multiple sclerosis, and the exhibition includes a display of their works. Barbara Visser (Dutch, born 1966 in Haarlem, lives in Brussels and Amsterdam) shows the video installation Last Lecture (2007), a multi-layered work which draws on footage of lectures in which actresses have been presented as Barbara Visser, sometimes receiving instructions from the artist through an earpiece.

A final pair of contributions brings a live component into the exhibition. Dora García (Spanish, born 1965 in Valladolid, lives and works in Brussels) exhibits Instant Narrative (IN) (2006-2008), involving an observer in the exhibition space, making clandestine notes on exhibition visitors — notes revealed to members of the public during their visit. As his contribution to the exhibition, Pawel Althamer / Nowolipie Group, Phil Collins, Dora García, Donelle Woolford, Christoph Schlingensief, Barbara Visser, Artur Zmijewski (American, born 1961 in Stoutsville, Ohio, lives in New Haven, Connecticut) present up-and-coming artist Donelle Woolford (American, born 1980 in Conyers, Georgia, lives in Harlem, New York) using one of the ICA’s upper galleries as a studio to construct her own sculptures.

Double Agent is curated by Claire Bishop (assistant professor of history of art at Warwick University) and Mark Sladen (director of exhibitions, ICA).

 

Christoph Schlingensief, Production still, The African Twin Towers, 2005, © Aino Laberenz.

Christoph Schlingensief, Production still, The African Twin Towers, 2005, © Aino Laberenz.



Barbara Visser, Last Lecture, 2007, courtesy Annet Gelink Gallery, first performed April, 12, 2007 at Museum De Paviljoens in Almere.

Donelle Woolford, Photograph Namik Minter and Frank Heath.

 

Nowolipie Group, Warsaw, courtesy Foksal Gallery Foundation.