- Echo Gone Wrong - https://echogonewrong.com -

THE ESTATE summer off-site exhibition by Tobias Kaspar

Kim? is pleased to announce THE ESTATE, its summer off-site exhibition by Tobias Kaspar. THE ESTATE, curated by Zane Onckule, plays with its double entendre; an “estate” being both the sum of a deceased person’s possessions, and an extensive piece of (privately owned) land often accompanied by a vast home. THE ESTATE’s first chapter SUMMER opens August 3 in Salacgrīva parish in form of a fictional collectors house — not with a capital C or H but rather a modest countryside house decored with artworks cum contemporary conversation pieces.

WITH
Eriks Apalais, Tristan Bera, Gerry Bibby, Drew Kahu’āina Broderick, Stefan Burger, Merlin Carpenter, Nicolas Ceccaldi, Vija Celmins, Jay Chung & Q Takeki Maeda, David Douard, Ramon Feller, Ffixxed Studios, Gina Folly, Oleg Frolov, Ryan Gander, Liam Gillick, Edgars Gluhovs, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, Guerilla Girls, Karl Holmqvist, Daniel Horn, Morag Keil, Emil Michael Klein, Ilya Lipkin, Fred Lonidier, Miltos Manetas, MAY, Daria Melnikova, Daniele Milvio, Jonathan Monk, Sveta Mordvskaya, Carter Mule, Kärt Ojavee, Josephine Pryde, Cinzia Ruggeri, Hinrich Sachs, Cindy Shermann, Nolan Simon, Mike E. Smith, Sarah Staton, Rikrit Tiravanija, Lucas Uhlmann, Miriam Visaczki, Danh Vo, Marie-Pascale Wellinger, Pedro Wirz, Seyoung Yoon, Artur Zmijewski.

THE ESTATE SUMMER
Opening: Saturday, August 3, 4-8pm
Dates: August 4 – September 30, 2019
Venue: Between Kuiķule and Lauvas (Salacgrīvas lauku teritorija, 4054 Latvia)
GPS: 57.729323, 24.535533

What if an art collector—or in more modest terms, a person interested in art who from time to time also happened to purchase, exchange, and receive art works as gifts—spent summers in rural Latvia? What would that house—let’s play it grand—that Estate look like? Of what would it be reminiscent of? Would the house pay homage to the shabby chic of Anna Karenina, or the Eurodesign that dominated 1990s interiors? Would it lean towards the Soviet-esque, or stick with a pre-revolution, Baltic-German style?

THE ESTATE’s SUMMER takes place in an abandoned Latvian summerhouse and imagines a fictional art collector who (could have) lived in a remote place such as this. Different artworks, ephemera, and leftovers from artistic productions join everyday utensils in creating a portrait that engages the entire house. Looking at the displayed artworks, it becomes clear that the collection or taste of this Collector is far from blue chip, where “signature style” and “key works” prevail. It is instead inclusive of many by-products and leftovers. Smaller, earlier works provide an image of a rather eclectic but engaged collection, in which the artworks form part of what could be described as a “conversation piece”, to quote the eponymous 18th-Century English portraiture style and Luchino Visconti film (1974).

THE ESTATE’s SUMMER opens on August 3 and remains open by appointment throughout September.
For inquiries please call +371 29600916.

SAVE THE DATE

THE ESTATE / AUTUMN
Opening: Wednesday, October 15, 6pm
Dates: October 16 – December 1, 2019
Venue: Kim? Contemporary Art Centre, Riga

For its second chapter AUTUMN, THE ESTATE travels to the exhibition space of Kim? Contemporary Art Centre in Riga. Unlike the leisurely summerhouse gathering with its grand inaugural dinner, champagne and cigarettes; where conversation and gossip thrived amongst the intimacy of the endless nights, THE ESTATE at Kim? paints a darker picture, the one focused instead on the politics of the guest list. Like any collection (be it a collection of artworks, objects or a grouping of people) AUTUMN is based on exclusion. Nothing can be included without the exclusion of something else. Deaccessioning.

The exhibition space will be lacquered in black paint, celebrating the black box theatre and encouraging a movement of the exhibition visitors onto the stage. Pieces of art and furniture from the summerhouse itself will then be placed within the exhibition space. The rest of the scenery exists merely as a white painted outline, a floor plan of sorts. The ground is scattered with labels, for example, the outlined gooseberry bush is accompanied by the words “Gooseberry Bushes”, in evocation of Lars von Trier’s Dogville (2003).

Supported by: Ministry of Culture, State Culture Capital Foundation, Riga City Council, Swiss Arts Council Pro Helvetia, Engelshus, Kokmuižas alus.