By Anthony Huberman
Published: January 1, 2009
Maire and Pisano are interested in language and how it relates to abstract object making. Their work, both as individuals and collaborators, hinges on the insight that an idea or an object's most fragile moment — when it's most vulnerable to being broken apart — is during its state of alchemic transformation, caught in midmotion between one identity and another. For example, Pisano made Turning a Sculpture into a Conversation (2006), where the act of making an object gradually transforms into a spoken-word piece, while Maire once engaged the art historian Arthur C. Danto in a conversation about an abstract sculpture, to make the video Spider Web (2006). Both works highlight language for its descriptive qualities, in a Joycean tradition of folding form into a story. Traditional binary constructs become useless, and the known and the unknown cease to be opposites. Theory, specifically that which relates to perception and reception, plays an important role for both artists. Organon, their 2008 project at Croy Nielsen gallery in Berlin, included six tables, each one covered with various nonfunctional articles. As they prepared the exhibition, they alternated roles of spectator and performer, either arranging the materials or taking notes in turn. As a metaphor for the process of collaboration, Organon points to the contingency of words and objects, and how multiple voices inevitably prevent any consensus on not only the reception of art, but its creation as well. To emphasize this idea, the artists recruited one participant to come in once a week to rearrange the objects. The exhibition thus became a crossroads between performance, interpretation, self-expression, and sculpture. In short, an active and potent collaboration that hopefully no one will ever fully understand. "Benoit Maire + Falke Pisano" originally appeared in the December 2008 / January 2009 issue of Modern Painters. For a complete list of articles from this issue available on ARTINFO, see Modern Painters' December 2008 / January 2009 Table of Contents.
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