Kunsthal Charlottenborg presents NATIVE LAND and MALENE LANDGREEN.

NATIVE LAND Stop Eject
MALENE LANDGREEN Color State
Kunsthal Charlottenborg

Nyhavn 2, 1051 Copenhagen K, Denmark
Phone: +45 33134022
Contact: Helle Bøgelund
[email protected]
http://tinyurl.com/yhp6bu8

NATIVE LAND Stop Eject

December 5, 2009 – February 21, 2010

Kunsthal Charlottenborg commences a collaborative effort with the French 
Fondation Cartier pour l'art contemporain, Paris presenting an 
exhibition which adds images and sounds to the consequences of 
globalisation and climate change.

'Raymond Depardon and I both came around to this same question: what is 
left of this world, of our native land, of the history of what so far is 
the only habitable planet?'

Paul Virilio
Raymond Depardon,
Claudine Nougaret
Paul Virilio
Diller Scofidio + Renfro,
Mark Hansen, Laura Kurgan, Ben Rubin

The exhibition NATIVE LAND, Stop Eject is presented by the Kunsthal 
Charlottenborg, Copenhagen, the Fondation Cartier pour l'art 
contemporain, Paris, the Leisure and Culture Center AlhóndigaBilbao, 
Bilbao, and ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe, with the 
contribution of Panasonic.

An exhibition created by Fondation Cratier pour l'art contemporain with 
the collaboration of Unesco

Created by the Fondation Cartier pour l'art contemporain, NATIVE LAND, 
Stop Eject explores the meaning of sedentariness and nomadism today, an 
epoch in which human migration flows are taking place on an 
unprecedented scale. The international COP15 conference on climate 
change organized by the United Nations and taking place in Copenhagen 
from December 7-18, 2009 attests to this critical moment in history, 
where the environment conditions what humans do, what they will become, 
and where they will live. NATIVE LAND, Stop Eject thus proposes a 
reflection on the notions of being rooted and uprooted, as well as 
related questions of identity in two works created especially for the 
exhibition. Filmmaker Raymond Depardon gives a voice to those who wish 
to remain on their land but are threatened with exile. Philosopher Paul 
Virilio, in collaboration with the artists architects Diller Scofidio + 
Renfro, Mark Hansen, and Laura Kurgan, examines and challenges new 
trends in contemporary human movement due to environmental, political, 
and economic factors.

HEAR THEM SPEAK, a film by Raymond Depardon with the sound engineer, 
Claudine Nougaret, is centered on nomads, farmers, islanders, and 
indigenous peoples, all of whom are either threatened with extinction or 
living on the periphery of globalization. Giving value to speaking and 
listening, he focuses on their mother tongue languages: Kawésqar, 
Mapuche, Afar, Quechua, Chipaya, Breton, Occitan, Yanomami, Guarani.

Though still spoken today, all the languages heard in the film-a 
large-scale projection that assigns as much importance to sound as 
image-are endangered, symbolizing the imminent threat to their identity. 
'I was born in my language,' says one woman, as she voices her anger, 
pain, and fears.

EXIT an innovative installation by Diller Scofidio + Renfro, Mark 
Hansen, Laura Kurgan and Ben Rubin gives form to Paul Virilio's concepts 
on human trajectories across the globe. In a circular and immersive 
projection, it presents 6 animated maps generated by a database of 
information provided by international organizations, with a focus upon 
the following subjects: Population Shifts: Cities. Remittances: Sending 
Money Home. Political Refugees and Forced Migration. Natural 
Catastrophes. Rising Seas, Sinking Cities. Speechless and Deforestation.

While you're waiting to come in and see EXIT, you can have a look in the 
room next door at the names of all the institutions and organisations 
that have provided the statistical material behind the dynamic maps. The 
person responsible for ensuring the validity of all the material used is 
Francois Gemenne, researcher and professor of migratory movements 
associated with climate change at the Sciences Po, Paris.

In a separate small video installation Paul Virilio contextualises EXIT. 
The video consists of an approximately 3-minute-long reading in which 
Virilio constantly moves forward towards the viewer while speaking of 
his nostalgia in thinking of the changes in 'magnitude of the world 
about its scale' and contemplating the loss of geographic space these 
changes entail - an idea that has been central to his philosophical work 
for decades.

The idea for the exhibition NATIVE LAND, Stop Eject was conceived by 
Hervé Chandès, director and chief curator of Fondation Cartier. What 
remains, he asks, of the idea of native land and mother tongue at a time 
when over 200 million people live in a country other than the one they 
were born in? It was these kind of facts that aroused Chandès' 
curiosity, compelled him to explore the consequences and gave rise to 
the process and concept behind the exhibition.

The following people have organised the exhibition:

Chief Curator: Hervé Chandès, General Director of the Fondation Cartier 
pour l'art contemporain, Paris

Scientific Consultant: Francois Gemenne, researcher and professor of 
migratory movement linked to climate change, Sciences Po, Paris

Curator: Ilana Shamoon, Curator at the Fondation Cartier pour l'art 
contemporain, Paris

The map Speechless and Deforestation has benefited from the scientific 
collaboration of Bruce Albert, Director of Research at the Institut de 
Recherche pour le développement, and Francois-Michel Le Tourneau, 
Director of Research at the Centre national de la recherche scientifique.

The following organizations have helped us in our acquisition of data. 
They have not, however, been asked to vouch for or endorse the content 
of this exhibition:

Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center, Oak Ridge National 
Laboratory; Center for International Earth Science Information Network 
(CIESIN), Columbia University; Centre for Research on Epidemiology of 
Disasters (CRED), École de Santé Publique, Université catholique de 
Louvain (EM-DAT database); Dartmouth Flood Observatory; Development 
Research Centre on Migration, Globalisation and Poverty (Migration DRC), 
University of Sussex; Fire Information for Resource Management and 
Global Land Cover Facility, University of Maryland; Global Forest Watch 
(GFW); Instituto Socioambiental (ISA); International Fund for 
Agricultural Development (IFAD); International Work Group for Indigenous 
Affairs (IWGIA); Komunitas Konservasi Indonesia WARSI (KKI WARSI); Model 
for the Assessment of Greenhouse-gas Induced Climate Change, A Regional 
Climate SCENario GENerator; South Dakota State University, Global Forest 
Monitoring Project System; Toyama University; UNESCO, Atlas of the 
World's Languages in Danger, 2009; United Nations High Commissioner for 
Refugees
(UNHCR); Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) and CIESIN, Last of the 
Wild project

Raymond Depardon was born in 1942 in Villefranche-sur-Saône, France and 
currently lives in Paris. Considered one of the greatest photographers 
in France today and acclaimed as a filmmaker by the most prestigious 
international film festivals, he occupies a unique position in the world 
of contemporary photography and film. After co-founding the Gamma photo 
agency in 1967, he joined Magnum in 1978. His desire to report on the 
state of our society, which was already palpable in his photography, has 
been incorporated into the films-both documentary and fiction-that he 
has produced over the last thirty-five years. Raymond Depardon has 
participated in several collective exhibitions organized by the 
Fondation Cartier pour l'art contemporain: By Night (1996), Amours 
(1997), The Desert (2000) and Yanomami, Spirit of the Forest (2002). He 
has made nearly twenty feature-length films and is the author of forty 
books.

Claudine Nougaret is a producer and sound engineer born in 1958 in 
Montpellier France. In 1992, she founded the production and distribution 
company 'Pamleraie et desert' with Raymond Depardon, which holds the 
rights to all of Depardon's films. She was the sound engineer and 
producer of many different films included in the official selections of 
the Venice, Berlin, and Cannes film festivals, the most recent of which 
was 'Modern Life' in 2008. Since 1997, she produced six Raymond Depardon 
films for the Fondation Cartier.

Paul Virilio was born in 1932 in Paris and currently lives in La 
Rochelle, France. Professor Emeritus at the École Spéciale 
d'Architecture in Paris, Paul Virilio also served as a Director and as 
President of this same institution from 1968 to 1998. In 1973, following 
the publication of his first philosophical essays, he became editor of 
the 'Espace Critique' collection at Éditions Galilée. He was awarded the 
Grand Prix National de la Critique in 1987. In 1990, he became Program 
Director at the Collège International de Philosophie under the 
presidency of Jacques Derrida. An urbanist and essayist specializing in 
the strategic issues related to new technologies, Paul Virilio has 
published many books, and his writings have appeared in numerous French 
and international publications. He has participated in several 
exhibitions at the Fondation Cartier pour l'art contemporain since 1991 
and organized the first exhibition devoted to the theme of accidents 
entitled Unknown Quantity (2002).

Diller Scofidio + Renfro is an interdisciplinary studio based in New 
York that fuses architecture with the visual and performing arts. Their 
work encompasses various fields including architecture, urban design, 
sitespecific installations, multimedia theater, electronic media, and 
print. It was co-founded in 1979 by Elizabeth Diller, Professor at 
Princeton University School of Architecture, and by Ricardo Scofidio, 
Professor Emeritus at The Cooper Union. Richard Renfro, who was recently 
the Cullinan Visiting Professor at Rice University, joined the agency in 
2004. Diller and Scofidio participated in the exhibition Un monde réel 
at the Fondation Cartier in 1999.

Mark Hansen is a statistician. He is an Associate Professor of 
Statistics at UCLA, where he also holds joint appointments in Design 
Media Art and Electrical Engineering.

Laura Kurgan is an architect and artist based in New York. She is the 
Director of the Spatial Information Design Lab and Director of Visual 
Studies at the GSAPP at Columbia University.

Ben Rubin is founder of Ear Studio. He is a visual artist and sound 
designer who brings together sound and new media within visual art 
installations, architecture, live performance and critical projects. He 
is a critic ingraphic design at the Yale School of Art.

Francois Gemenne is a research fellow and junior lecturer at the 
Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations 
(IDDRI), Sciences Po Paris. His research deals with population 
displacements associated with environmental changes, and adaptation to 
climate change. He teaches the geopolitics of climate change at Sciences Po.


MALENE LANDGREEN - COLOR STATE

5 December 2009 – 21 February 2010

Kunsthal Charlottenborg has invited Malene Landgreen to use six 
exhibition rooms for a combined total installation. Landgreen paints 
directly on the walls in an energyfilled, colour-intense sequence of 
installations that unfold in different ways from room to room, thus 
transforming the architecture and our experience of the body in space.

'Proportions are crucial both in our minds and in our surroundings, 
where as visual or mental presences they establish harmonies and 
connections that involve both thoughts and feelings. Art allows complete 
idealism and can suggest what life could be like as opposed to what it 
is. Proportions are specific and identifiable – they accentuate time and 
space. Forms and colours capture our attention and take hold of us. And 
they can do something special in relation to each other. In their 
simplest form colours are infinite quantities.'

COLOR STATE is a total installation that moves through six rooms in 
Kunsthal Charlottenborg's north wing as an integrated sequence. Malene 
Landgreen has moved far beyond the conventional frames of painting. We 
witnessed this most recently in the to the wall exhibition in Kunsthal 
Charlottenborg and at Arena in Århus Kunstbygning, where Landgreen's 
work unfolded over several walls. With her enduring, site-specific 
projects at places such as Ålborg Airport, Novo Nordisk, Frederiksberg 
Gymnasium and Danmarks Radio City in Ørestaden, Landgreen has painted on 
the grand scale and established herself as one of the most sought-after 
artists in Denmark when it comes to focusing on our everyday surroundings.

Colours are Malene Landgreen's vocabulary, and it is through their 
relations to volume that she 'speaks out'. She invites us to a dialogue 
in potential mental spaces where there is room for the spectator. In 
Kunsthal Charlottenborg, too, her art sets up an interplay between the 
architecture, the space and the light. Here the space, the building and 
the art are unfolded and new abstract stories told that enclose the body 
as if one had entered an enormous book about the artist.

'My work derives meaning from the fact that the uncertain, abstract, 
unformulated, chaotic and inharmonious, no less than the well-ordered, 
well-considered and flawless, always relates proportionally to something 
else. No matter how incomprehensible and ungraspable it might be, indeed 
precisely because it is. It's all about relations and proportions. That 
applies in art, in architecture and in life', says Malene Landgreen.

Kurator: Maria Gadegaard, Acting Director, Kunsthal Charlottenborg

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