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Viktor Timofeev part of group exhibition ‘When the Sick Rule the World’ at Gr_und, Berlin

When the Sick Rule the World

With: Beth Collar, Marek Delong & Anna Slama, Nschotschi Haslinger, Ville Kallio, Painting Clubb feat. Viktor Timofeev, Lauryn Youden

Curated by Christina Gigliotti

16. 2. – 15. 3. 2019
Opening February 15th, from 7pm

“When two sick bodies come together their desperate hearts open, it is lovely to watch them…” (1)

The exhibition When the Sick Rule the World is inspired by an essay by the same title written by Dodie Bellamy. Within her writing, Bellamy often calls attention to the unjustifiable and increasingly unsustainable living conditions that late-capitalism has imposed on present-day reality. It is the unrelenting objective of the hegemonic powers in place to ever-expand and maintain dominion over those who can be controlled, and to rid society of that which is considered undesirable, unattractive, and unhealthy. Whatever or whoever falls into this category is systematically hidden away or eradicated either by authoritative forces or incessant self-regulation. For the human subject, the pursuit of wellness is mandatory. In Bellamy’s When the Sick Rule the World, the topic of physical and mental health comes to the fore. Bellamy imagines a reality in which those existing in the underbelly of society are finally accorded agency, integrity and freedom of expression–no longer condemned because of their inability to conceal their differences and conform to norms that have been beset upon them.

In a similar vein to Bellamy’s text, the exhibition When the Sick Rule the World presents artworks that have spawned from visions of alternative realities or narratives in which sickness and health, birth and decay are leveled, accepted, perhaps even exalted. The enigmatic figures depicted in the works of Nschotschi Haslinger can often be seen embracing their eerie surroundings, content and relaxed in actively caring for one another or themselves, despite the jagged scenery. Her ceramic creatures appear inflamed with animation, having only just emerged from their underworld. Similarly spawning, the work of Marek Delong and Anna Slama depicts a kind of fantastical birthing scene of an alien being. The collaborative work between Viktor Timofeev and Painting Clubb deals more closely with the relationship one has with their own material body. A cryptic message in an alphabet created by Timofeev reads “My relationship with my body has changed”, on a thinly veiled backdrop. In Beth Collar’s work, attention is directed to the fragility and instability of the human body in its surroundings. Her figure is both supported and impaled by their crutches. In a similar effect, Lauryn Youden’s sculptural canes double as potential weapons of self defense. Finally, Ville Kallio’s video work Plumber’s Crusty Paradise introduces us an anthropomorphization of human waste in the form of a living “fatberg” also known as the Patron Serpent of Planetary Computation and Feces, who energetically parallels the human mind to that of a sewer system.

(1) Dodie Bellamy, When the Sick Rule the World, 2015

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