DORA GARCÍA, The Sinthome Score, 2015 [incl. original drawing]

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DORA GARCÍA, The Sinthome Score, 2015, alias Venice Sinthome Score Edition
26,5 x 37 x 11,5 cm
printed matter, photo print + original drawing, signed, numbered
score book (31 x 23 cm) used as performance prop, numbered and also signed
edition 16
published by ProjectSD, Barcelona, Spain

7 parts
– one of the scores (performance prop) used by the performers during the exhibition in the Venice Biennual 2015, signed with initials, numbered
– original drawing made by Dora García in A4 size, which refers to the cosmogonies created for the work, signed
– photograph, 30 x 24 cm, C-print of a moment of the performance in Venice, signed with initials, dated, numbered
– catalogue ‘I See Words’ (sealed)
– folio with certificate of authenticity, signed, dated in print
– folio with sticker
– cardboard archive box with sticker

The work of the French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan appears in García’s recent work. The score of the performance is based on an “unofficial” English translation of Jacques Lacan’s seminar 23 “Le Sinthome” (1975-1976), a series of ten lectures that drew from the writings of James Joyce to elaborate on language, the unconscious, and a reconsideration of the Borromean knot.
Lacan and his relationship to James Joyce is the subject of the Dora García’s work The Sinthome Score. The term “sinthome” (symptom) originates from a text of the same name by Lacan, Le Séminaire livre XXIII, Le Sinthome (1975-1976) where Lacan uses Joyce’s writings to expand his model of the three rings composing a Borromean knot, i.e. Symbolic, Imaginary and Real. Joyce’s subversion of language becomes a way of knotting them together, as well as avoiding their collapse into madness: it is the synthome (symptom; synthomeis spelled in old French), in homage to the Irish writer’s penchant for etymology, portmanteaus and polyglotism.

The Sinthome Score (performance publication, photograph of performance): two people perform as a duo, where one of them reads from a book (cover looks like a music score publication) called “The Sinthome Score” and the second one executes a series of movements that change each time the reader begins a new chapter, following instructions in the book.

Garcia’s work is accompanied by ten sets of movements, one drawn for each of the ten lectures. Two performers determine the rhythm, cadence, and speed of the performance. Garcia’s score and choreographic notation welcome new participants, accidental stutters of the body, or slips of the tongue. It is left to the visitor to decide if, how, and when to enter the conversation. The performance was shown at the Venice Biennale 2015, running continuously during the opening hours.

The publication is one of the scores used at the Venice Biennual 2015.

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YANN SÉRANDOUR, One Week, 2014

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YANN SÉRANDOUR, One Week, 2014
21, 6 x 17,7 cm / 22 x 18,5 x 0,5 cm
text on A4, folio folded out 37,2 x 44,7 cm
edition 50
published by Christophe Daviet-Thery, Paris, France

In 1969, Seth Siegelaub organized a group show “One Month” and selected 31 artists he invited to produce a work on their assigned day in March of that same year. As a kind of exhibition catalogue he produced a calendar of 31 pages entitled “March on 1969”, which included six blank pages corresponding to seven artists who turned down Siegelaub’s invitation (Carl Andre, Michael Asher, Dan Flavin, Sol Lewitt, Bruce Nauman and Ed Rusha and xxxx).

AI WEIWEI, Namelist 2008-2011, 2014

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AI WEIWEI, Namelist 2008-2011, 2014
size print 78,5 x 28 cm
offset on paper, here unframed
edition 100
numbered, hand signed by the artist
published by Art Edition, Cologne, Germany
mint
rare

inv.AWei 000-pr

 

Verso the print reads: ‘Names of the 2008 student-earthquake-victims researched by Ai Weiwei Studio, Courtesy of the artist’. At the lower part of the print a sequence of numbers is printed.

Ai Weiwei is well known for criticizing governmental behaviour of the People’s Republic of China, although he has no problems with giving the White House the finger. Having spent his younger years in New York in the 1980s, when conceptual and performance art were dominant and while Warhol was active, he has learnt how to combine his own life and art into a daring and often politically charged performance that helps to define how we should see China of today. Ai Weiwei has been harassed and jailed for his continually calls to account of the Chinese governmental attitude.

The print ‘Namelist’ (2008-2011) includes names of the more than 5,000 schoolchildren who died during the Sichuan earthquake of 2008 due to a disproportionate number of collapses of shoddy schoolhouse constructions. Chinese authorities systematically neglected the deaths and its causes. The disaster was twisted. Therefore Ai Weiwei began to straighten out the record. Bad construction had contributed to the disaster and officials were very keen to suppress evidence of corruption. The factual number of victims was difficult to find out, until Weiwei and his helpers made the count, name by name. The students are memorialized at various exhibition venues and moments like here in the edition “Namelist”.

During the time Ai Weiwei was being withheld by the Chinese government, a period in which he was unable to travel and his passport having been taken in, he placed a fresh bouquet in the basket of a bicycle outside his studio each morning. His #aiflowers Instagram up loads invited people everywhere to make flowers to remember the very young students lost in the 2008 Sichuan earthquake.

Ai Weiwei: “Once we find the names and numbers, I think a scientific study should be done to study how the schools collapsed and how the students died,” says Ai. “If anybody tries to hide it, it is a crime to the people and the nation. This time I don’t think anybody can let it go.”

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History of prices:
Karl & Faber, Munich, Germany 6 June 2019 € 4.625,- (incl. premium)
eBay 8 June 2014 € 1.577,- (hammer price)

ANNE-LISE COSTE, You are not alone, 2014 [silkscreen print]

ANNE-LISE COSTE, You are not alone, 2014
56 x 35 cm / 22 x 14 inches
silkscreen print
edition 45 + 5 AP
published by Art Metropole, Toronto, Canada

This poster is a reproduction of Anne-Lise Coste’s original painting “You are not alone” (2013), the title of which derives from a religious flyer that advertises spiritual comfort. Coste de-contextualizes this marking that one might encounter in its sprayed format fleetingly on flyers or on urban surfaces. In the context of her oeuvre one may interpret that either ‘the police is around’ or e.g. co-squatters and protesters help each other at all times.

KINKE KOOI, Be Precise, 2014

KINKE KOOI, Be Precise, 2014
60,5 x 46 cm
pencil drawing on piezografie print
each print is touched up and refined with pencil by the artist
edition 10
published by Plaats Maken, Arnhem, Netherlands

 

History of prices:
Plaats Maken, Arnhem, Netherlands € 395,- May 2014

 

DAMIEN HIRST, Mickey Mouse, 2014 [large or small version]

DAMIEN HIRST, Mickey Mouse, 2014 [large]
152,4 x 122,4 cm
silkscreen with glazes
signed, numbered
edition 50
published by Other Criteria, London, England
not available

History of prices:
Other Criteria, London, England £3.333,34 – excl. VAT, unframed, launch price 2014
Other Criteria, London, England £7.000 – incl. VAT, unframed May 2014 (“Please note that prices increase as the editions sell out.”)

Damien Hirst says: “The thing about Mickey is that even though he’s gone through so many shifts in form and association, he’s timeless. In a way, he means the same in the 21st Century as he did decades ago. He’s relevant because he’s remained so culturally ingrained and he still looks so great.”

 

 

 

DAMIEN HIRST, Mickey Mouse, 2014 [small]
87,5 x 70 cm
silkscreen with glazes
signed, numbered
edition 250
published by Other Criteria, London, England
sold

MARIJKE VAN WARMERDAM, Morning glory, 2014

MARIJKE VAN WARMERDAM, Morning glory, 2014
30,5 x 25 cm
inkjet print
edition 3 + 1 AP
p.o.r.

 

Marijke van Warmerdam often uses image and title as two dissimilar entities living in symbiosis. Such a combination emphasizes elements of what is already literally shown in the image itself. In this work it is a combination of time and the light of a photographed running iPad apparently switched on in the morning when one gets up. KvG

CHRISTIAN MARCLAY, Splat, 2013

CHRISTIAN MARCLAY, Splat, 2013
46,7 x 35,6 cm / 18-1/4 x 14 inches
screen print with splash painting
edition 30
published by Graphic Studio, Tampa, USA
not available

Continuing his exploration of collage and the visualization of sound these partly unique prints utilize imagery from Manga comics, originally published in Japan and translated for the US market, and onomatopoeic words. Since the late 1990s, Marclay has created “graphic” scores, non-traditional forms of notation, for improvisational interpretation by musicians and vocal performers.

History of prices:
Graphic Studio, Tampa, USA     € 3.270,- / $ 4,500.- December 2013