COPENHAGEN — What might appear to be a bouncy game of giant-sized billiards is actually
the recreation of a playful 1970s art installation, on display at a museum on
the outskirts of
Copenhagen.
اضافة اعلان
Three large,
inflatable balls bob across a white, bouncy castle-style mattress. Visitors
young and old run, jump, pass, or stumble in an anarchic explosion of energy
rarely seen in hushed museum halls.
Arken Museum of
Modern Art, about 15km southwest of central Copenhagen, has faithfully
recreated “Giant Billiard”, an installation first staged in 1970 by rebellious
Austrian architect/artist group Haus-Rucker-Co.
Back then, the
group’s three founders believed times called for radical change — an inflatable
oasis, they thought, might help break down existing hierarchies of power and
create new utopian urban spaces.
Indeed, amongst
the whoops, laughs, and gasps, visitors inadvertently become part of a game —
they fight against or alongside each other depending how the giant inflatable
balls fall.
“Maybe we can give
something of the seventies, which was very positive (compared) to nowadays,”
laughed 81-year-old Gunter Zamp Kelp, one of the three original members of
Haus-Rucker-Co, which formed in 1967.
“The intention was
to break the historic heritage character of the museum and to put some more
life in and to bring a new kind of activity into the museum style,” he added.
After first
appearing in Vienna in 1970, “Giant Billiard” was staged in New York later that
year. But it rarely appeared in the following 50 years. The Arken show is a
rare recreation and its first appearance in Scandinavia.
Curators say the
work, staged today amid growing social inequality and isolation, could not be
timelier.
“Hopefully, you
will walk away thinking that sometimes unconventional solutions are needed. And
we need this more than ever,” said Arken curator Jenny Lund.
“It’s also okay if
they just have fun — and we need fun, I think, more now than ever with
everything we are facing,” she added.
Visitor Frederik
Svanholm, 46, had his own interpretation.
“If you’re just
lying down, then you are safe, right? As soon as you stand up in life, then the
danger comes and knocks you out sometimes. That’s what it tells me,” he told
AFP.
While some of
Arken’s visitors might miss the profound social commentary, many seemed keen to
partake in a bounce at the installation’s opening on October 8.
“I think it’s a
nice idea to make art that, like, gets you to interact with other people,” said
38-year-old office worker Laura Konrad. “You interact with people you don’t
know at all.”
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