John Bock, Maltratierte Fregatte (Maltreated Frigate), 2006, photo by Traven Rice.

A Mad Motor Home Complete with Experimental Architectural Intervention

John Bock, still from Palms, 58 min., film.

John Bock, still from Palms, 58 min., film.

John Bock, still from Maltratierte Fregatte (Maltreated Frigate), 2006, film.

 

Barbican
Silk Street
020 7638 4141
London
The Curve
John Bock
Curve-Vehicle incl. π-Man-(.)

June 10-September 12, 2010

This is the first major UK commission for the internationally acclaimed German artist John Bock. Bock is renowned for his humorous, eccentric and chaotic interventions that combine sculpture, film and “lectures," Bock’s trademark performances. For this new installation in The Curve Bock constructs a madcap interpretation of experimental architecture. Bock creates a mobile, travelling home which docks with a series of makeshift structures suspended from the gallery ceiling. Curve-Vehicle incl. π-Man-(.) by John Bock opens 10 June 2010.

Metal pod-like structures adorned with plastics, fabrics, found materials and handmade elements hang from the ceiling and walls, resembling a kind of utopian, plug-in city. Incorporated into the structures are a noodle bar, a pub and a shop alluding to the original plans for the Barbican’s Frobisher Crescent which was to include a shopping arcade one floor above The Curve. Bock and a select group of actors periodically deliver live “lectures” using the installation as a set. Travelling the length of The Curve, the driver of a motorised vehicle docks with each structure and interacts with those working in the noodle bar, pub and shop. Captured on film, these lectures are projected onto a screen as part of the installation throughout the run of the exhibition.

Bock’s installations and lectures draw on a broad range of interests from economics, architecture, fashion, film, theatre, philosophy and music. In the early 1990s he gained recognition for his lectures — teetering on the brink of sense and nonsense. Using props such as chalkboards and overhead projectors, these lectures are quasi-scientific lessons commenting on the connections between art and economic systems. Remnants of these actions remain in the exhibition space as a suggestion of the event that has occurred. Videos documenting these lectures become integrated into the installations themselves and allow visitors to watch again as part of the works.

Although Bock has documented his work on video from an early stage, film has become increasingly central to his work in recent years. Maltreated Frigate, 2006, is a performance inspired by the maritime disaster of the frigate Medusa in 1817, a gruesome tale of mutiny and cannibalism. In a blend of rock opera, theatre of the absurd, animated sculpture and puppet show, Bock tells this story in a fast paced, outlandish performance. Situated in Magazin, the four storey storage warehouse of the Berlin State Opera, the central prop is a converted police van suspended from the rafters of the building’s atrium. In 10 scenes, where the live action is extended to the catacombs of the theatre the artist and actors play out Bock’s version of the tale using his own characteristic array of props; a bicycle wheel, a milk pump, life-size dolls. Accompaniment from the live band, Blackmail, interspersed with Bock’s lectures and live video of the action projected onto large screens create a wild performance.

In 2007 Bock delved further into the narrative structure of feature films with Palms. The 58-minute film immediately seems to fit the conventions of a film noir road movie as two murderous protagonists travel the west coast of America in a classic convertible. The dialogue, a mixture of nonsense and philosophical meditations, along with bizarre homemade props soon reminds us of Bock’s distinctive style.

Born in Gribbohm, Germany, in 1965, John Bock lives and works in Berlin. Bock’s work has been exhibited widely including solo exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, 2000; ICA, London, 2004; State Opera, Berlin, 2006; Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt, 2007 and REDCAT, Los Angeles, 2008. He has participated in numerous international exhibitions, including the Venice Biennale, 1999 and 2005; documenta 11, Kassel, 2002; Carnegie International, Pittsburgh, 2004; Manifesta 5, San Sebastian, 2004 and the Biennale of Sydney, 2010.

John Bock, detail of plans for Curve-Vehicle incl. π-Man-(.)

John Bock, still from Palms, 2007, Video, Still photography: Jan Windszus, Camera: David Schultz, Editing: Benjamin Quabeck, Produced with the friendly support of Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt, © 2007 John Bock. All rights reserved.

A Multidisciplinary Practice that has Evolved into Moving Images

John Bock, video still Lütte mit Rucola (Lütte with arugula), 2006.

John Bock, still from Gast (Guest), 2004, Video, 11:30 min., Videostills, Camera: John Bock, Marc Aschenbrenner, Editing: Marc Aschenbrenner, Courtesy: Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York, © 2004 John Bock. All rights reserved.

John Bock, still from Gast (Guest), 2004, Video, 11:30 min., Videostills, Camera: John Bock, Marc Aschenbrenner, Editing: Marc Aschenbrenner, Courtesy: Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York, © 2004 John Bock. All rights reserved.

John Bock, Boxer, Berlin, 2002, Video, 2:30 min., Videostills, Camera: Knut Klaßen, Editing: Marc Aschenbrenner, Courtesy: Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York, © 2002 John Bock. All rights reserved.

John Bock, Meech Fever, 2004, 16 mm film, 38:30 min, Still Photography: Christina Zück, Camera: David Schultz, Editing: Marc Aschenbrenner, Courtesy: Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York, Co-commissioned and co-produced by Fondazione Nicola Trussardi, Milan and Carnegie International 2004/05, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, © 2004 John Bock. All rights reserved.

 

Schirn Kunsthalle
Römerberg
+49-69-29-98-820
Frankfurt

John Bock, Films
June 7-September 23 2007

John Bock is known primarily for his spectacular, comic-grotesque actions in which theater, lecture, video, installation, and sculpture merge in a unique way. In recent years video as a medium has moved to the foreground and become independent of the lecture-performances. From video shorts with rapid montage, Bock has recently moved to distinctly longer and more narrative films in which he works with actors and real sets, which he then infiltrates with his own universe. As in his live performances, here too he celebrates a colorful world that is as enigmatic as it is absurd and that eludes rational interpretation, interspersed with countless biographical, artistic, and scientific references. The exhibition concentrates on John Bock’s genuinely cinematic works for the first time and presents six films and videos from 2001 to 2006 as well as a film produced especially for the Schirn: Palms, a mixture of road movie and gangster film shot in Los Angeles.

Since the early 1990s John Bock has attracted attention with what he calls “lectures,” in which he reflects on the connections between art and economic theory in a format reminiscent of academic lectures. Starting out from that basis he has developed over time increasingly complex, large-scale installations in which he employs simple everyday objects and materials like wood, fabric, wire, cotton wadding, toothpaste, shaving cream, cleaning products, and food, which he treats and combines in unusual ways. They serve as props for his actions and then he leaves them in the exhibition space. The medium of video has frequently played a role as well: the artist documented his actions with a camera and integrated the resulting video into his installations or parts of his live performances are presented cinematically.

In 2001 John Bock produced Porzellan-Isoschizo-Küchentat des neurodermitischen Brockenfalls im Kaffeestrudel (Porcelain Isoschizo Kitchen Act of the Neurodermatitic Scrap Falling in the Coffee Maelstrom) his first autonomous video, which is clearly different from his filmed performances. Barely two minutes long, this surreal action for the camera shows the artist in his kitchen struggling with animated food running amok. With reference to Vienna Actionism, Bock employs a radical editing technique in which the action emerges from the cinematic montage and whose rapid tempo deliberately overtaxes perception. In addition to this kitchen film he has produced a whole series of brief, crude, staccato-like videos that are distinguished by their grotesque wit and an extraordinary visual power. The film Boxer (2002) is one example that will be shown in the exhibition.

In Gast (Guest), which at first glance appears to be a simple home movie, John Bock made what is perhaps his most personal film in 2004. A hare hops through a bright room. It eats something here, discovers something there; suddenly stops here, raises his head there; and at the next moment is gone again. The world is seen entirely from the hare’s perspective: the apartment is a long-familiar space in which the animal clearly on top of the world — no wonder since the rabbit is not at all a “guest” as the title of the film suggests but at home. John Bock becomes an impartial researcher into life, into the traces of our civilization, whether of humans or animals, bringing them together in this experimental process in which way that everything is turned: up becomes down, near becomes far, the animal has human features, the familiar home becomes alien.

In the past three years he has produced distinctly longer and technically more complex videos and films that are increasingly like feature films. The artist began working with professional actors like Anne Tismer and Lars Rudolph in Meechfieber (Meech fever) and Anne Brochet in Salon de Beton (Salon of Concrete) and creating ever more complex scenarios. Using the camera he often takes his stage to remote places, like the farm in northern Germany on which he grew up, a bunker, a castle in southwest France, or the desert in California — starting with real backdrops by creating his own universe. Without following a concrete narrative, his recent works nonetheless increasingly employ narrative elements and frequently reflect on established film genres like the Heimatfilm (sentimental regional film) or, as in Dandy, the historical film.

Thus the title Dandy refers to the hero of the film shot in the Château du Bosc, the family estate of Toulouse-Lautrec, and so to the artist himself. The film begins with an epileptic fit suffered by an artist who is clearly aristocratic. Louise, the beautiful young servant, hurries over. After quite a bit of fiddling about with wires and forms he recovers in order to dedicate himself to his three most noble activities: the production of harmonies, for example, between black and gold or pedestal and sculpture, the production of great monologues — sometimes given to the verge of collapse — on art and the world in which words such as “being-essence problematic,” “genius of drives,” or “art welfare” occur, and finally the making of a machine for the production of the perfect fragrance for which all sorts of strange ingredients are required including the vaginal fluid of certain women from Montmartre. John Bock’s bizarre objects and machines are repeatedly employed: poetic forms from tea strainers, tinfoil, bottles, and paint. Dandy can be seen apart from the cinematic narrative as a kind of “object comedy”: beyond a certain degree of poetic liberation “things” are just irresistibly funny.

Palms is Bock’s second work for the Schirn, following the performance- installation Marlit, in the context of the exhibition Grotesque! The first of John Bock’s films to be produced in America, it leads us through an empty, indefinite landscape. Two killers have arrived from Germany. They are wearing white shirts under black single-breasted suits, narrow ties, and jet black sunglasses, as we have come to expect from countless films. They have a job to do in America and are, apart from small sadistic outbursts, emphatically objective when underway. The stations of their business trip are framed by two icons of architectural history: homes by Richard Neutra and Rudolf Schindler represent the starting and ending point, respectively; between them the odyssey follows the trail of strange signs along the highways of Los Angeles, through the desert, a lot where a house has burned down, a strange, small open-air stage with a band, and the bar that provides the film’s title: the Palms. The killer’s paths are lined with various protagonists: a woman bartender explains the existence of different planes of time, of “now time” and “later time”, almost like present and future, if it weren’t for perplexing times that are shot through the planes of time and their logical connections like destructive elements. One of the killers sits down during the woman’s monologue, on a barstool with a bizarrely proliferating, amorphous folding backrest and puts on a helmet of braided electrical cables with eggshells woven in. It remains uncertain whether the killers will find the mysterious unknown man. And if so, what is in store for him?

John Bock, born in Gribbohm, Germany, in 1965, lives and works in Berlin and is considered one of the most important and innovative young artists of the present. With his performances, videos and installations he has participated in numerous international exhibitions, including the Venice Biennale (1999 and 2005), documenta 11 in Kassel (2002), and Manifesta 5 in San Sebastian (2004). There have been solo exhibitions dedicated to him at the Museum of Modern Art, New York (2000); the Museum Bojmans van Beuningen, Rotterdam (2003); and the ICA in London (2005), among others. The works shown in this exhibition are from important international museums and collections such as the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, and the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh.

John Bock, Palms, 2007, Video, Still photography: Jan Windszus, Camera: David Schultz, Editing: Benjamin Quabeck, Produced with the friendly support of Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt, © 2007 John Bock. All rights reserved.