
Installation view of Roman Ondák’s Measuring the Universe at Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, 2007, Roman Ondák (Slovakian, b. 1966), Measuring the Universe, 2007, Performance and installation, Collections MoMA, New York, and Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, Photo: Haydar Koyupinar, Courtesy of the artist.

Installation view of Roman Ondák’s Measuring the Universe at Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, 2007, Roman Ondák (Slovakian, b. 1966), Measuring the Universe, 2007, Performance and installation, Collections MoMA, New York, and Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, Photo: Haydar Koyupinar, Courtesy of the artist.

Installation view of Roman Ondák’s Measuring the Universe at Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, 2007, Roman Ondák (Slovakian, b. 1966), Measuring the Universe, 2007, Performance and installation, Collections MoMA, New York, and Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, Photo: Haydar Koyupinar, Courtesy of the artist. |
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Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53 Street
212-708-9400
New York
Contemporary Galleries,
second floor
Performance 4:
Roman Ondák
June 24-September 14, 2009
The fourth installment of the Performance Exhibition Series features Roman Ondák’s (Slovakian, b. 1966) Measuring the Universe (2007), a recent acquisition by MoMA. The work, first enacted in the Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, in 2007, is a performance-based work in which the height of each visitor to the exhibition is recorded on the gallery’s wall by a museum attendant, eventually creating a unique wall drawing and a visual record of thousands of museum visitors. Measuring the Universe is the second work solely based on performance to enter MoMA’s collection, following the 2008 acquisition of Tino Sehgal’s The Kiss (2003). The exhibition is organized by Klaus Biesenbach, Chief Curator, with Jenny Schlenzka, Assistant Curator for Performance, Department of Media and Performance Art, The Museum of Modern Art.
Klaus Biesenbach says: “Ondák is an important emerging artist who carries forward the transition of conceptual art coming out of Central Europe, and is known for installations, drawings, and performances that draw from this rich history. Measuring the Universe combines many of the characteristics in Ondák’s oeuvre, most importantly the practice of involvement and participation with the spectator, collapsing the usual distinction between performer and audience, professional and amateur, production and reception.”
The work is brought into existence by simple and minimal means: an empty white cube gallery, museum attendants who are equipped with black felt tip pens, and museum visitors. The interaction among these elements is scripted as follows: once a visitor enters the gallery, he/she is approached by a museum attendant who asks the visitors if he is interested in having his height measured. If the visitor agrees to participate, the attendant then marks the height with a black line onto the wall, and writes the visitor’s first name and the date the measurement took place. This procedure is repeated continuously with every visitor who enters the gallery for the duration of the exhibition.
After a short time a distinctive wall drawing appears, consisting of ghostly traces of thousands of visitors. The three dimensions of the gallery are eventually expanded by a fourth dimension: a recording of time.
The result can be understood in reference to others’ works in MoMA’s collection, including Sol LeWitt’s wall drawings, which are similarly based on a set of simple instructions carried out by someone other than the artist, or Felix Gonzalez-Torres’s Untitled (Placebo) (1991), which also converts the passive onlooker into an active participant by inviting visitors to pick up silver-wrapped candies from the Museum floor. |