Taryn Simon. Action Research / The Stagecraft of Power

Date

Hours

11:00–22:00

Garage Museum of Contemporary Art presents Action Research / The Stagecraft of Power, featuring two new series by Taryn Simon. Continuing a collaboration that began three years ago between the acclaimed American artist and the Museum in Moscow, for the first time in her career Simon will also be working “live” to develop a new piece over the duration of the exhibition, providing audiences with unprecedented access to her singular research processes.

In the words of writer Salman Rushdie, Simon’s practice extends “the limits of what we are allowed to see and know,” to investigate and describe structures that influence life in postindustrial societies. She is first and foremost a storyteller of facts, using photography, film, sculpture, and installation to chronicle truths that are hard to believe. Through her dexterous juxtapositions, realities emerge as fictions, or imaginative narrations, but in her elaboration of them it becomes clear that they would be hard to invent.  

Taryn Simon. Action Research / The Stagecraft of Power

Public program
Taryn Simon’s exhibition Action Research / The Stagecraft of Power is accompanied by a public program that includes an artist talk on the conception and creation of her two photography series.

Paperwork, and the Will of Capital was partly shown at the 56th Venice Biennale in 2015, and Black Square, started in 2006, has never been exhibited in its entirety before. A special part of the public program will be devoted to the filming of a documentary on questions related to nuclear energy*.

The first part of the documentary was shot in May 2015 at the Radon federal enterprise, as a part of Garage Field Research. Working in collaboration with Russia’s State Atomic Energy Corporation (ROSATOM), the artist made a black cube (Black Square XVII) from vitrified nuclear material. The process of vitrification took place on May 21, 2015, converting the radioactive waste from a volatile liquid to a stable solid mass resembling polished black glass, which is considered to be one of the safest and most effective methods for the long-term neutralization of nuclear waste. Black Square XVII is currently being stored in a concrete, reinforced steel container, within a holding chamber surrounded by clay-rich soil, at the Radon plant in Sergiev Posad, located 72 kilometers northeast of Moscow. It will stay there until its radioactive properties have diminished to levels deemed safe for human exposure and exhibition. In 3015, approximately 1,000 years after its creation, the work will be permanently displayed at Garage in a custom-designed void.

While Black Square XVII will take many years to finally manifest itself for audiences, the project has given rise to a film, which is under development as part of this exhibition.

During the eight weeks of the exhibition, there will be lectures, talks, and discussions of social, cultural, and political phenomena connected with nuclear energy. The topics will run from radioactive waste storage and disposal to the implications of the atomic bomb and anthropogenic catastrophes.

Of this unusual approach, Simon says: “Many parts of the film are shot by proxy, following my specific instructions, recording places where I’m not allowed to enter as a foreigner. Other scenes include experiences of the atomic industry to which I would otherwise have no access. By this and all the psychological sludge it confronts, the film’s authorship, ownership, and story are in many ways up for grabs—much like the object itself.” The film is due for completion in September 2017.

*Garage is providing technical support for the making of the film.

Schedule

Artist Talk: Taryn Simon

Date
March 17, Thursday
Time
19:30–21:00
Place
Garage Education Center

Alexander Nikitin. The Power and Responsibility of the Atom. The Cost and Importance of Contemporary Ecology

Moderator: Nikita Medyantsev

Date
March 18, Friday
Time
19:30–21:00 
Place
Garage Central Gallery

Alexei Ulko. The Radioactive Trace in the Colonial Paradigm

Date
Friday, March 25
Time
19:00–20:00
Place
Garage Central Gallery

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