IOCOSE

Sunflower seeds on "Sunflower Seeds" (2011)

STATEMENT

IOCOSE exhibits a new artwork at Tate Modern, made from a previous 
artwork at Tate Modern.

The artist group has thrown several real sunflower seeds on Ai Weiwei's 
porcelain 'Sunflower Seeds'. The porcelain seeds, previously exhibited 
at the Turbine Hall at Tate Modern, are now part of a new artwork by IOCOSE.

The new artwork looks exactly the same as the previous one, as the 
natural seeds and those made of porcelain are indistinguishable from 
each other. IOCOSE reclaims the authorship of the new installation and 
reminds viewers of Ai Weiwei’s previous statement: 'what you see is not 
what you see, and what you see is not what it means'.


The artwork will be on exhibition from the 29th of January 2011 until 
the 2nd of May 2011.

PRESS RELEASE

On the early morning of Saturday 29th of January, the four members of 
artist group IOCOSE stopped at a grocery store at the Bankside district 
in London, UK. They bought an innocuous bag of sunflower seeds at the 
price of 1 British Pound. A short walk from the grocery was the 
'Sunflower Seeds' exhibition by Ai Weiwei. The installation, exhibited 
at the Turbine Hall at Tate Modern as part of the Unilever Series, 
displayed millions of hand-crafted porcelains in the shape of sunflower 
seeds. The four IOCOSEs took hold of their catapults and started 
launching the cheaper and real sunflower seeds in the exhibition area. 
Then changed the signs at the Turbine Hall and renamed the artwork 
'Sunflower Seeds on Sunflowers Seeds'.

While the security was trying to understand what was happening, the 
visitors appreciated the new artwork. 'It looks exactly the same' said 
an old lady when addressed by IOCOSE. 'I came here at Tate to see the 
famous work by Ai Weiwei, but I'm not disappointed to know the 
exhibition has been changed', said a boy, while taking pictures of the 
new artwork. A gentleman instead complained about the intervention: 'how 
very dare you? This is art that you are ruining, and art is everyone's!'.

It took a while before the security noticed IOCOSE's unruly behaviour. 
When asked to leave their own exhibition, the four IOCOSEs expressed 
disappointment and were joined by a group of tourists who were honestly 
appreciating the unexpected opening. Despite this, IOCOSE would like to 
complain for the lack of promptness by the security. Now that IOCOSE's 
work is on exhibition the group would like to demand major awareness on 
its preservation.

Artist group IOCOSE is proud to be exhibiting at such an important 
institution as Tate Modern. The Unilever Series featured in its previous 
editions some of the greatest international contemporary artists, such 
as Anish Kapoor, Olafur Eliasson, Carsten Höller, Ai Weiwei and Miroslaw 
Balka. IOCOSE is proud to be mentioned next to such important artists.

The group IOCOSE started working in 2006. Among its most famous 
projects, in 2010 the group worked on 'In the Long Run', a BBC News 
special edition for the death of pop icon Madonna. In 2009 it exhibited 
'Floppy Trip', a drug made of floppy discs. In the same year 
collaborated to 'Sokkomb', the IKEA guillotine. In 2008 set up a 
propaganda campaign for the Italian Democratic Party based on thousands 
of spam emails. IOCOSE is also responsible for the NoTube Contest, an 
ongoing contest for the most valueless video on YouTube.

CONTACT

http://www.iocose.org/projects/sunflower_seeds_on_sunflower_seeds
[email protected]
Mobile (Paolo): 0044 (0)7502 172 687


CREDITS

Video: Adrian Rolea, Nikolai Christov
Photos: Jacek Barcikowski

--
paolo - IOCOSE
http://iocose.org
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