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Fantastic Narratives in Contemporary Videos at Deutsche Guggenheim
Written by Randolph Cardwell Monday, 11 July 2011 23:43

BERLIN.- Once Upon a Time focuses on how fantastic stories and modern fairytales are represented in video art today. Based on important video artworks from the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum collection, the exhibition Once Upon a Time investigates how contemporary artists adapt motives and narrative techniques from myths, fables, and fairy tales to mirror current social phenomena and events in recent history. On view at the Deutsche Guggenheim, in Berlin through 9th of October.
Aleksandra Mir and Francis Alÿs manipulate belief in similar ways, imagining tales of collective emancipation. In First Woman on the Moon (1999 – ), Mir reenacts the historic 1969 lunar landing with female astronauts on a beach in the Netherlands. The event is a feminist sequel to the original mission, extending the mediated legend. Similarly, Alÿs fabricates a modern urban myth in When Faith Moves Mountains (Cuando la fe mueve montañas, 2002). For this work, approximately five-hundred volunteers shoveled sand up and over a dune in the outskirts of Lima, Peru, until the mountain moved about ten centimeters from its original position. The endeavor demonstrates the potential power of a collective working together toward a goal, even one so fleeting.
Janaina Tschäpe explores historical memory in Lacrimacorpus (2004), in which she adopts the legend of the “squonk” or Lacrimacorpus dissolvens, a sorrowful creature who, when trapped, dissolves into a pool of its own tears. Tschäpe’s creature inhabits the Schloss Ettersburg, near Buchenwald, notable for both its literary and horrifyingly tragic history.
The protagonist in Pierre Huyghe’s One Million Kingdoms (2001), manga character Annlee, intertwines astronaut Neil Armstrong’s account of the first moon landing (from which her voice is digitally derived) with passages from Jules Verne’s 1864 novel “A Journey to the Center of the Earth” (“Voyage au centre de la Terre”), mapping the landscape as she speaks.

The fables presented by Mika Rottenberg and Cao Fei use fantastical tropes to dramatize alienation in an industrial context. In Whose Utopia (2006) Cao examines the effects of capitalism on individual workers at the OSRAM China Lighting Ltd. factory in the Pearl River Delta. In Dough (2006) Rottenberg seeks to counterbalance the dehumanization of work by creating an absurd assembly line manned by laborers whose bodily excretions and extraordinary physiques play a part in the literal “sweatshop.”
Each work in Once Upon a Time tells a story and leaves the viewer subtly altered by the possibilities for transformation of human, political, and social conditions.
The Deutsche Guggenheim is an art museum,located in the ground floor of the Deutsche Bank building, a sandstone building constructed in 1920 on the Unter den Linden boulevard in Berlin, Germany. It is a unique cooperation between the Guggenheim Foundation and the Deutsche Bank. The 3,800 square feet (350 m2) exhibition space was designed by Richard Gluckman, an American architect. There are 3 or 4 exhibitions per year.
Funded entirely by the Deutsche Bank, the museum’s primary purpose is to commission important new works by contemporary artists that will then enter the Guggenheim collection.] At least once a year, one artist is presented with a new work which has been specifically created for the exhibition space. Commissions have in the past included paintings by James Rosenquist and Jeff Koons, photos by Hiroshi Sugimoto and Jeff Wall as well as large-scale installations by Gerhard Richter, Hanne Darboven, Lawrence Weiner, Phoebe Washburn, and Anish Kapoor.
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