magic language /// game of whispers

magic language///game of whispers

Contemporary objects from Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden at Revelations - Fine Craft and Creation Fair.

magic language///game of whispers is an innovative curatorial concept based on the children’s game known by many names, including ‘téléphone arabe’, ‘chinese whispers’ and ‘the messenger game’, where a person whispers a message to the next, passing the message through a line of people until the last person announces the message to the entire group. Curator Marianne Zamecznik developed this method for selecting contemporary crafts from across the Nordic region.

magic language///game of whispers not onlydraws upon a forgotten way of creating new meaning, but is also a way to engage five curators, institutions, and countries in the process of exhibition-making. The game of whispers itself becomes a tool to generate texts, images, reflection, dialogue and engagement. Instead of having one curator travelling from place to place to select works – the objects themselves travel and “select” their counterparts with the help of the curator-as-translator, says Zamecznik about her curatorial method.

Five Nordic craft associations have carefully selected their national curator for the “game”. They were asked to respond to an introductory statement by Zamecznik and select objects from images and a statement about the previous object. The process continues in a sort of relay race, where one curator after another selects a work to be included in the exhibition.

The curators are Katrine Borup (Denmark), Agnieszka Knap (Sweden), Anna Leoniak (Iceland), Katarina Siltavuori (Finland) and Marianne Zamecznik (Norway). Each curator was asked to read the introductory statement by Marianne Zameczn.

Date: 09.09 - 13.09 2015
Location: Grand Palais, Paris

About

magic language///game of whispers

Contemporary objects from Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden at Revelations - Fine Craft and Creation Fair.

magic language///game of whispers is an innovative curatorial concept based on the children’s game known by many names, including ‘téléphone arabe’, ‘chinese whispers’ and ‘the messenger game’, where a person whispers a message to the next, passing the message through a line of people until the last person announces the message to the entire group. Curator Marianne Zamecznik developed this method for selecting contemporary crafts from across the Nordic region.

magic language///game of whispers not onlydraws upon a forgotten way of creating new meaning, but is also a way to engage five curators, institutions, and countries in the process of exhibition-making. The game of whispers itself becomes a tool to generate texts, images, reflection, dialogue and engagement. Instead of having one curator travelling from place to place to select works – the objects themselves travel and “select” their counterparts with the help of the curator-as-translator, says Zamecznik about her curatorial method.

Five Nordic craft associations have carefully selected their national curator for the “game”. They were asked to respond to an introductory statement by Zamecznik and select objects from images and a statement about the previous object. The process continues in a sort of relay race, where one curator after another selects a work to be included in the exhibition.

The curators are Katrine Borup (Denmark), Agnieszka Knap (Sweden), Anna Leoniak (Iceland), Katarina Siltavuori (Finland) and Marianne Zamecznik (Norway). Each curator was asked to read the introductory statement by Marianne Zamecznik

 magic language///game of whispers is inspired by the book ’The Order of Things’ by Michel Foucault, in which it is explained how classical thought organizes the understanding of things based on a ternary code, as opposed to the more dominant binary code (the signifier and the signified). In addition to the meaning and the shape of a thing, the theory operates with a a third element, the ‘conjuctor’. The role of this third element is to place things in relation to each other according to principles of sympathy or antipathy, and in so doing create seemingly infinite chains of comparisons and connections between things. A thing’s relation to other things is also expressed in the way things are presented or displayed. The ‘conjuctor’, or third element, can be understood as a sort of interpreter.

In light of this theory, a saw is connected to the tree it cuts, and does not make sense without it. It does not make sense in relation to other tools, only in relation to its specific use. Moreover, a walnut and a brain can be organised in relation to their likeness, and the word or idea of a brain, or a walnut, does not exist as separate abstract entities.

When there was a likeness, such as between the walnut and the brain, the renaissance person would immediately make a connection between the two, thinking that eating the walnut might be good for the brain. If another person found this thesis to be plausible, a new understanding of this connection would be established. So infinite was the chain of comparisons and connections that it became difficult to organise knowledge. Beliefs were often based on magic texts and religions.

Later, Carl Linneus introduced the idea of categories, and as a result similarity became less important and difference became more important. The process lead to what we know as scientific classification, which is based mostly on the idea that things are different.

magic language///game of whispers aims to re-engage the understanding of how things relate to the world not by separation, but by likeness.

Participants

No.1: DIY place #1: Bali
Kjersti Lande
Noregi

No. 2: Trallbaneväggen
Inger Andersson
Svíþjóð

No 3: Plethora
Deepa Panchamia
Finnland

No.4: Krysantemum
Marianne Nielsen
Danmörk

No. 5: Scarab
OrriFinn Jewels
Ísland

No. 6: Flora Oblitus
Pernille Mouritzen
Danmörk

No 7: Black Cloud
Camilla Luihn
Noregur

No 8: Traces
Helga Ósk Einarsdóttir
Ísland

No 9: House 4
Maria Nuutinen
Finnland

No 10: The Box
Maki Okamoto
Svíþjóð

No 11: Brynja and Skjöldur
Studio Hlutagerðin
Ísland

No 12: Meditation #1
Lea Mi Engholm
Danmörk

No 13: Changing Perception
Saana Murtti
Finnland

No 14: Secrets(blue)
Hanne Friis
Noregur

No 15: Das Unheimliche
Miro Sazdic
Svíþjóð

No16: Kiitos II
Sonja Löfgren
Finnland

No 17: TAROT
Janne Krogh Hansen
Danmörk

No 18: New Nature - before and after science
Mia E. Göransson
Svíþjóð

No 19: The Larvik Series
gunzlerpolmar
Noregur

No 20: Dialog
Studio Hanna Whitehead
Ísland

No 21: Potlàc VII
Beatrice Brovia
Svíþjóð

No 22: Anarkistens perlering
Trine Trier
Danmörk

No 23: Sipp og Hoj!
Thorunn Arnadottir
Ísland

No 24: Kantamus
Nathalie Lahdenmäki
Finnland

No 25: Whispering
Ingrid Becker
Noregur