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Gallery installation of a miniature city bathed in dark blue light
Gallery installation of a miniature city bathed in dark blue light

Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller, After the summer of smoke and fire, Installation view, 2021  ​Luhring Augustine, New York

At their Museum Tinguely retrospective, Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller welcome participants interacting with their works, which combine elements of theatre, video and sound design

The Canadian artist duo Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller began officially collaborating almost by chance, despite being married and having previously helped each other with their individual practices for over a decade. Cardiff had been invited to do a show at the artist-led space Western Front in Vancouver in the mid-1990s, and after working in their shared studio on what would become The Dark Pool (1995). “We couldn’t remember whose idea it was,” she says. “So we asked the organisation: ‘can we do this as a collaboration?’” The fruits of three decades of working together have now been brought together for a new show at Museum Tinguely, which will include 14 multimedia works.

Making works sing

As well as being a collaboration between two artists—“We work well together because we have different skills and different patience for different things,” Cardiff says—the works also rely on the attention and participation of audiences. “Some viewers or participants have a magic that enables them to see things that others don’t,” Cardiff says. Whether it is a table covered in speakers activated by the movements of visitors (Experiment in F# Minor, 2013), or intricate details that may be missed inside the diorama windows of Escape Room (2021), the presence of what Cardiff calls “talented participants or talented viewers” can really make works sing. While the artist is referring to the curiosity and participation of members of the general public, on occasions the visitors really are talented, as was the case in New York recently when the musician and Talking Heads frontman David Byrne turned up unannounced to play on The Instrument of Troubled Dreams (2018). “It was great,” Cardiff says, “the gallery kept texting us images of him playing.”

When struck, the labelled keys of The Instrument of Troubled Dreams trigger a variety of recordings, from singing to the sounds of the sea and even windmills turning. Cardiff says that the duo will likely slip in surreptitiously to play it during the Basel show, doing “a Hitchcock”, she says, in reference to the director’s reputation for making cameo appearances in his own films.

The Basel exhibition came about after the artists were awarded the Wilhelm Lehmbruck Prize in 2020, which led to a show at the Lehmbruck Museum in Duisburg, Germany, which has now travelled to Basel. The sculpture prize was first awarded in 1966 and there have only been ten other recipients, among them Richard Serra, Joseph Beuys and Jean Tinguely. It may seem like a slightly odd choice, given that, although Cardiff and Miller’s work has sculptural elements to it, their practice is much more wide ranging, embracing elements of theatre, video and sound design.

Read full article at theartnewspaper.com

 

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