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ARTIFICIAL HELLS

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artificial hells<br />

Martha Rosler’s How Do We Know What Home Looks Like? was more sociological<br />

in spirit, comprising video interviews with residents and statistical<br />

information concerning the inhabitants. Milan- based collective Premiata<br />

Ditta’s Relationship Maps attempted to visualise data derived from questionnaires<br />

handed out to the Unité’s residents, while the German artist Regina<br />

Möller worked with some of the children in the building to create dolls’<br />

houses, an allusion to Le Corbusier’s concept of the apartment as a playful<br />

pedagogical space. Heimo Zobernig converted one of the apartments into a<br />

café, reportedly the most popular installation in the whole show. 15<br />

A smaller group of artists, seemingly at a loss as to what to do in the<br />

building, reflected on the process of making site- specific work. Renée<br />

Green’s Apartment Inhabited by the Artist Prior to the Opening pondered the<br />

problems of being a nomadic artist: viewers could see traces of her daily<br />

living activity and attempts to perform the role of an artist in her notes and<br />

sketches of the landscape. A. Arefin presented an installation of files showing<br />

the correspondence between each of the artists and Yves Aupetitallot,<br />

while Stephan Dillemuth, invited to participate in both ‘Project Unité’ and<br />

‘Sonsbeek 93’, produced documentaries about both shows, screening the<br />

Firminy video at Sonsbeek and vice versa.<br />

As this range of works indicate, ‘Project Unité’ is clearly transitional but<br />

contains a number of projects that shift European exhibition-making into a<br />

more socially conscious framework. Firstly, its location in a partially inhabited<br />

building whose architecture contained the aspiration to functional and<br />

communal living. In this instance, the use of the word ‘project’ rather than<br />

‘exhibition’ in the title seems to imply that the totality of the situation<br />

Renée Green, Apartment Inhabited by the Artist Prior to the Opening, 1993<br />

198

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