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Rivane Neuenschwander: A Day Like Any Other

Rivane Neuenschwander: A Day Like Any Other

Exhibitions
Rivane Neuenschwander: A Day Like Any Other
June 23 – September 19 2010
This major midcareer survey of Brazilian artist Rivane Neuenschwander (b. 1967, Belo Horizonte, Brazil) will cover a decade of the internationally admired artist’s work. It will spotlight the artist’s unique contribution to the narrative of Brazilian Conceptualism and reveal her wide-ranging, interdisciplinary practice which merges painting, photography, film, sculpture, installation, collaborative actions, and participatory events. Her authorship of the work is primary, but she also functions as an editor, collaborator, social organizer, and commissioning agent. Like her predecessors Lygia Clark and Hélio Oiticica, Neuenschwander resists a singular direction in her practice. Instead, the artist creates a series of organic relationships that interweave themes such as nature, language, temporality, and the poetry of the quotidian.

“It is Neuenschwander’s extravagant disregard for artistic categories that makes her work so perfectly tempered for this time. It is the ease with which she lives in the university of the world that guarantees her work its freshness and depth,” said Richard Flood, Chief Curator at the New Museum.

Three installations in “A Day Like Any Other” will involve direct visitor participation: Neuenschwander’s I Wish Your Wish 2003; First Love, 2010; and Walking in Circles, 2000. I Wish Your Wish will be installed in the New Museum’s lobby gallery space (always open to the public free of charge). At the church of Nosso Senhor do Bonfim in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil the faithful tie silk ribbons to their wrists and to the gates of the church, and, according to tradition, their wishes are granted when the ribbons wear away and fall off. For Neuenschwander’s installation I Wish Your Wish at the New Museum, hundreds of similar ribbons will be printed with visitors’ wishes from past projects, and will hang from the gallery walls. Visitors will be invited to remove a ribbon, tie it to their wrist, and replace it with a new wish written on slip of paper, continuing the project that keeps generating new ribbons and dreams. For another piece, First Love, a police sketch artist will sit with visitors and listen as those visitors describe the faces of their first loves; the sketch artist will then produce portraits of these “first loves” to adorn the walls of the gallery for the duration of the exhibition. In Walking in Circles, 2000, small halos of adhesive applied to the gallery floor by the artist will pick up dirt from visitors’ shoes. The work will create a physical and temporal map of the exhibition’s traffic patterns.

The exhibition will include two of Neuenschwander’s immersive installations. The first of these, Rain Rains, 2002, is an environment of leaking buckets that are controlled from flooding by a Sisyphean recirculation tended to by museum staff in four-hour cycles. The second immersive work, The Conversation, 2010, will be realized expressly for the exhibition and pays homage to Francis Ford Coppola’s revolutionary 1974 film of the same name. Like the film, Neuenschwander’s installation investigates the systematic invasion of privacy in an era of dangerously purposed technology. The artist and the New Museum will work with security experts to create an Orwellian environment filled with surveillance devices. Prior to the exhibition’s opening, Neuenschwander will raid the “bug-filled” room in an attempt to uncover the devices, a performance that will be recorded by these devices and then played back in the partially dissembled exhibition space.

In addition to these participatory actions and major installations, the exhibition will also contain several suites of new paintings including After the Storm, 2010, made with maps of New York counties exposed to torrential rain and At a Certain Distance (Ex-Voto Paintings), 2010, as well as the lustrously beautiful film The Tenant, 2010, which follows the journey of a soap bubble as it wanders through a deserted house in a permanent state of suspension. The show will also include Involuntary Sculptures (Speech Acts), 2001–10, communally evolved sculptures made by customers during conversations at bars and restaurants near Neuenschwander’s home in Brazil, and A Day Like Any Other, 2008, an informal installation involving a series of flip clocks placed throughout the New Museum building, among other works in the exhibition.

“Rivane Neuenschwander: A Day Like Any Other” is curated by Richard Flood, Chief Curator at the New Museum. The exhibition is organized by the New Museum in collaboration with the Irish Museum of Modern Art.
June 23 – September 19 2010

Major surveys