SOPHIE TAPPEINER curated by Theresa Roessler
„Taking Notes“

12.9.- 14.10. 2023 Press release Arrow
SOPHIE TAPPEINER, An der Hülben 3, 1010 Vienna
www.sophietappeiner.com

Curator(s):

Theresa Roessler More Arrow

Theresa Roessler is a curator. Her research focuses on the politics and culture of remembrance as well as on the aesthetic strategies and methods of storytelling in which artists engage with archives and archive-making. Roessler has worked for Kunstverein Braunschweig, ZKM | Center for Art and Media and most recently for Kunstverein Freiburg, where she curated shows such as Owls and Promises by Alex Ayed (2022), On the Brink of Remembering (2022) and Mock Kings by Jala Wahid (2023).

Read a short interview with Theresa Roessler (pdf)

Photo / Foto: Robert Hamacher

Artist(s):

  • Sarah Lehnerer
  • Sofia Defino Leiby
  • Moyra Davey
  • Sophie Thun
  • Rose Salane
  • Marina Xenofontos

Exhibition text

More Arrow

“Strange, though, that we can never catch it in the act,” writes Christa Wolf in Ein Tag im Jahr (One Day a Year), on attempts to capture life. She continues: “It escapes the watching eye and the diligently noting hand, and in the end—at the end of a chapter of one’s life, too—has assembled itself behind our backs according to our unspoken needs: More substantial, more significant, more exciting, more meaningful, heavier with stories.” [1] The exhibition Taking Notes takes up precisely this awareness-desiring, introspective, reconstructive moment; a moment that seeks to materialize what has been lived and felt, to translate it into multiple perspectives and/or media.

    The act of note-taking manifests as an attentive way of perceiving (unknowingly) established routines in everyday actions and thought, a form of listening, zooming in and out. Interwoven with a certain logic of recording, it adopts a diaristic, explorative, and partly self-contemplative mode, one that takes the everyday world, the supposedly banal, as its starting point, grasping it as material and shaping and altering and transferring and processing it further. Pressing questions about the reproduction and representability of everyday lived experience, its actual transferability and translatability, are already inherent within this process, given the fallibility and manipulability of the perceiving and remembering self. How can we get hold of a world that eludes mere observation? 

In a state of simultaneity, occupying the neither-nor, the presented works probe supposedly opposing realms, their fraying visible: Note-taking—be it in the form of photography, sculpture, drawing or actual diary writing—moves between the subjectively experienced and the objectively categorized, the supposedly private somewhere within the sphere of the public. It oscillates between reflective and fictionalizing representation, and thus between reassurance and alienation. It juxtaposes the idea of a coherent ego that promises authenticity and truth, alongside their simultaneous destruction. At the same time, it could be described as a search for individual recollection within collective memory. Demonstrably, the narration of one single, individually-experienced moment may then also serve as a testament, a critical analysis; a document of history. Preserving the sentiment of the times, it can be read as symptomatic of existing societal processes and embedded in already determined cultural and political narratives.

 

[1] Wolf, C. (2007). One Day a Year: 1960–2000. Translated by Lowell A. Bangerter. New York City: Europa Editions, p. 13.: Moyra Davey, Sofia Defino Leiby, Sarah Lehnerer, Sophie Thun, Marina Xenofonto

Videos

Photos

Moyra Davey, Fifty Minutes, Videostill, 2006, Digital video with sound, 50:37 Min.
Courtesy the artist; greengrassi, London; Galerie Buchholz, Berlin/Cologne/New York
Sofia Defino Leiby, Omonia diary 1, Detail, 2018, Hand-bound artist book
Courtesy the artist
Sarah Lehnerer, Somatics (27.4.23), 2023, Frottage, ink on acid-free tissue paper, 260 x 200 cm
Courtesy the artist
With Zenta (Laima Eglīte&), 2021, Photography by Zenta Dzividzinska, interpreted by Sophie Thun, Silver gelatine print and photograms on baryta paper, 30 x 40 cm, Unique
Courtesy the artist
Marina Xenofontos, Underpass, 2009, Silkscreen print on steel, 41 x 31.5 cm, Unique
Courtesy the artist and Hot Wheels, Athens
Rose Salane, Repeating the encounter 3, 2021, Found signed CD cases, 61 x 88.9 x 5.1 cm 24 x 35 x 2 in
© Rose Salane 2023, courtesy the artist and Carlos/Ishikawa, London | Photography: Stephen James
Rose Salane, Repeating the encounter 3, 2021, Found signed CD cases, 61 x 88.9 x 5.1 cm 24 x 35 x 2 in
© Rose Salane 2023, courtesy the artist and Carlos/Ishikawa | Photography: Stephen James