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ARTIFICIAL HELLS

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artificial hells<br />

on the floor, for the artists’ former colleagues who watched their efforts<br />

cruelly incinerated, and for the museum itself, as seen in Żmijewski’s curt<br />

exchange with one of the lady invigilators. Yet at the same time it also<br />

suggests that education is a closed process of social exchange, undertaken<br />

with mutual commitment, over a long duration, rather the performance of<br />

acts to be observed by others. It takes an artist with an eye for painfully<br />

telling detail to give a compelling structure and narrative to such a formless<br />

and invisible exchange. 43<br />

IV. What Functions, Produces<br />

My final example is the Paris- based sculptor Thomas Hirschhorn (b.1957),<br />

who at regular intervals in the last decade has organised large- scale social<br />

projects in the form of a ‘monument’, often dedicated to a philosopher and<br />

produced in collaboration with residents who live near the site of its<br />

making, usually on the outskirts of a city. Since 2004, a pedagogic component<br />

has become increasingly important to these works. Musée Précaire<br />

Albinet (2004), located in the Aubervilliers district of north- east Paris near<br />

Hirschhorn’s studio, involved the collaboration and training of local residents<br />

to install seven weekly exhibitions of works loaned from the<br />

Pompidou Centre collection (Beuys, Warhol, Duchamp, Malevich, Léger,<br />

Mondrian and Dalí). These were supported by a weekly timetable of<br />

events: an atelier pour enfants on Wednesdays, a writing workshop for<br />

adults on Thursdays, a general debate on Fridays, and a discussion with an<br />

art historian or critic on Saturdays. This timetable continued with a dinner,<br />

made by a family or group (using funds from the project) on Sundays; the<br />

de-installation and installation of work on Mondays; and the vernissage and<br />

party on Tuesdays.<br />

As can be imagined, the primary audience for the Musée Précaire Albinet<br />

was the local and regularly returning inhabitants, rather than a general<br />

public of art enthusiasts. In 2009 Hirschhorn addressed the problem of this<br />

division in a large- scale project located in a suburb of Amsterdam called<br />

the Bijlmer. Its title, The Bijlmer- Spinoza Festival, was deliberately misleading:<br />

the project was not so much a festival as a large installation environment<br />

for hosting a programme of daily lectures and workshops. The construction<br />

was topped with an oversized sculpture of a book (Spinoza’s Ethics),<br />

decorated with bunting, and framed by the residential tower blocks, a<br />

running track and an elevated railway line. A noticeboard and pile of free<br />

newspapers were positioned by the nearest path to entice passers-by, along<br />

with a car covered in brightly coloured votive objects for Spinoza. Entering<br />

the structure, one passed an unlicensed bar. The rest of the installation took<br />

its layout from the aerial view of an open book: the ‘pages’ were walls, and<br />

the spaces in between were rooms with different functions: a library of<br />

books by and about Spinoza, a newspaper office, an archival display about<br />

260

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