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ARTIFICIAL HELLS

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notes to pages 194– 8<br />

4 In his introduction, Jan Hoet argued that ‘Artists do not investigate the<br />

aesthetics of things: they revel in the hidden beauty, the essence, the<br />

ecstasy.’ Hoet, ‘An Introduction’, Documenta IX, Stuttgart: Edition<br />

Cantz, 1992, vol. 1, p. 17.<br />

5 For a good discussion of transdisciplinarity in 1990s exhibition catalogues,<br />

see Liz Donato, ‘The Disciplinary Shift in Contemporary Art<br />

Exhibition Practices, 1990s–Today’, available at www.formerwest.org<br />

6 In making this distinction I am indebted to Miwon Kwon’s history of<br />

site- specificity, One Place After Another: Site- Specific Art and Locational<br />

Identity, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2002. Kwon’s focus, however, is<br />

North American rather than European, and revolves around questions of<br />

judgement centered on the model of community proposed by site- specific<br />

art in the 1980s and 1990s, rather than on the subject of curating and spectatorship.<br />

In the US, a central frame of reference for site- specific curating<br />

was the trial and removal of Richard Serra’s Tilted Arc from Federal<br />

Plaza in 1989.<br />

7 Rather, Hoet frames the exhibition in poetic terms: it indicates a transformation<br />

of the museum into ‘a metaphor of that quiet (today more<br />

than ever), forgotten place, an almost inaccessible place, a mythical<br />

place: the place of Mystery’. (Jan Hoet, ‘“Chambres d’Amis”: A<br />

Museum Ventures Out’, in Chambres d’Amis, Ghent: Museum van<br />

Hedendaagse Kunst, 1986, p. 350.) Pragmatically, the ambition was to<br />

produce more support for the Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst in<br />

Ghent, of which Hoet was director, by increasing the city’s interest in<br />

contemporary art.<br />

8 Ibid., p. 345– 6.<br />

9 In the catalogue, Geys’s contribution is illustrated with installation shots<br />

of the artist standing next to the doors, while the six hosts are represented<br />

by a short paragraph written by each of them, detailing their employment,<br />

income and views (if any) of his project.<br />

10 Joshua Decter, ‘Back to Babel: Project Unité’, Artforum, November 1993,<br />

p. 92.<br />

11 Mark Dion, interview with the author, New York, 25 November 2009.<br />

12 Renée Green, ‘Scenes from a Group Show: “Project Unité” ’, in Alex<br />

Coles (ed.), Site- Specificity: The Ethnographic Turn, London: Black Dog,<br />

2000, p. 121.<br />

13 Aupetitallot, in Stephan Dillemuth, Project Unité, DVD, 1993.<br />

14 The installation accelerated the ruination, creating a dystopian image of<br />

the building as if left abandoned, surrounding a Le Corbusier bench with<br />

walls covered in bird shit and piles of dead insects on the floor, in deliberate<br />

contrast to the cleanliness of the architect’s imagined scheme.<br />

15 ‘It can be said with confidence that, of all the exhibits, Zobernig’s space<br />

was the most visited and for the longest periods of time – or at least it was<br />

until marauding bands of (presumably atypical) drunken Unité residents<br />

343

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