A Glass Darkly
28 September - 23 November 2014
Saturday 27 September, 5 pm: opening
Location: Hogewal 1-9, The Hague
Open: Wednesday - Sunday, 12-5 pm
Stroom School: A Glass Darkly
The side program of this exhibition features a special evening with lectures and presentations (on 12 November) and a number of guided tours on Sundays.
Download exhibition guide (pdf)
Iman Issa
Imogen Stidworthy
Metahaven
Natascha Sadr Haghighian & Rashad Becker
Noam Toran
Vermeir & Heiremans
A Glass Darkly looks to examine a historical vision in the light of the present moment.
The year 2014 marks exactly 100 years since the German visionary writer
Paul Scheerbart (1863-1915) wrote the book Glasarchitektur.
According to Scheerbart, only living inside glass architecture could
elevate society by allowing contemplation of the infinite and the
spatial, liberating humanity from the brick culture that tied it to the
Earth. Written the same year that his friend and peer, the architect Bruno Taut, exhibited his famous Glass Pavilion
at the Werkbund Exhibition in Cologne, the book exemplifies the
modernist ideals of transparency and universality as projections for a
progressive 'new culture'. How do these ideals stand up today?
Avoiding
focusing on the nostalgia for modernist architecture still ubiquitous
in western culture, this exhibition looks to take the key historical
propositions of glass architecture ideology in order to analyse them
comparatively with their contemporary ramifications. The notion of
‘transparency' in particular is the focus of much attention today, not
necessarily in strict architectural terms, but as something that is
symbolic of the growing tension between private and public space. Whilst
considering the aesthetics of transparency, the artists and artistic
duos participating in A Glass Darkly also contemplate the profundity of what living under such conditions means for the human subject.
The
exhibition seeks to understand this subject from numerous perspectives,
looking at everything from private and public life, technological
freedoms, ownership and rights, and legislative and financial
accountability. Each artist here might be described as working
reflectively, holding up a mirror to life in contemporary society,
questioning the extent to which the idea of transparency in itself is
being used as a kind of veil. What thresholds might we maintain in our
lives when we weigh up the aspirations and vulnerabilities that come
with ‘open' society? Most significantly perhaps, the exhibition asks:
might an awareness of this apparatus prompt us once more to think about
the possibilities for another 'new culture'?
A Glass Darkly is conceived by Nav Haq
following an invitation from Stroom Den Haag to develop an exhibition
in response to the organisation's own research into the writings of Paul
Scheerbart.
A Glass Darkly is made possible by:
Creative Industries Fund NL and Mondriaan Fund.
PRESS
Tubelight, December 2014-February 2015 (in Dutch)
The Underground, November-December 2014
Tubelight.nl (website), 29 October 2014
fd: persoonlijk, 25 October 2014 (in Dutch)
de Volkskrant, 24 October 2014 (in Dutch)
H ART, 16 October 2014 (in Dutch)
Mousse Magazine, 10 October 2014
Blikvangen, 3 October 2014 (in Dutch)
LINKS
http://imanissa.com
www.imogenstidworthy.com
www.metahaven.net
www.johannkoenig.de (Natascha Sadr Haghighian)
www.discogs.com (Rashad Becker)
www.noamtoran.com
www.in-residence.be (Vermeir & Heiremans)
http://scheerbart.de (in German)
- 28 Sep '14 - 23 Nov '14
- Hogewal 1-9, The Hague
- Entrance: free

photo: Gerrit Schreurs, courtesy Stroom Den Haag

photo: Gerrit Schreurs, courtesy Stroom Den Haag

photo: Gerrit Schreurs, courtesy Stroom Den Haag

photo: Gerrit Schreurs, courtesy Stroom Den Haag

photo: Gerrit Schreurs, courtesy Stroom Den Haag

photo: Courtesy the artist, Matt's Gallery, London and AKINCI, Amsterdam

photo: Courtesy the artist and Rodeo, Istanbul

photo: Courtesy the artist and Rodeo, Istanbul

photo: courtesy the artist, Matt's Gallery, London and AKINCI, Amsterdam

photo: courtesy of Future Gallery

photo: courtesy of Future Gallery

photo: courtesy the artists

photo: courtesy the artists

photo: courtesy the artist

photo: courtesy the artist

photo: courtesy the artists

