'albertus pictor'
A game of chess has been used as a metaphor for life in our cultural history many times. In the video work “Nummer twaalf” by the Dutch artist Guido van der Werve we follow the sound of piano keys, which each follows a move on a chessboard – a chess-piano! The chess Grandmaster Leonid Yudasin constructed this match and used the challenge of the King’s Gambit as a known opening. The opponent accepts and in the end – a stalemate. It does not mean that one player is in check, but there are simply no more moves to be made.
We zoom and slide slowly from one game of chess, to several in the same room, where also a chamber orchestra is playing. We continue slowly to zoom out to a hermits cottage and see a man sitting or standing in vast deserted nature.
The volcano Eyjafjallajökull on Iceland is wild and active since some weeks, but the volcano Mount St. Helen in this video keeps still. The threat of eruption is present in the video, although the silence. The other nature scene is the enormous 1300 kilometer long and rough San Andreas Fault, which is close to an earthquake of large magnitude according to studies. A deceptive calm.
Each move on the chessboard is spelled out on the film, in the nature, as a coordinate. As if it were longitudes and latitudes or some other secret code message.
A lonely man keeps counting the stars. Never comes to a summary.
The sun finally sets and a day is over.
The installation sends references to romantic ideas and the idea of artists as hermit. Still it has a tickling nerve. I just had to stay to see it all, forty minutes in the video room at Luhring Augustine gallery in Chelsea, New York, earlier this year.
Chance, moments, calculations.
Infinity and the sublime, who can resist?
Guido van der Werve is trained as a classical musician. Came to think about artists’ book “Chords 1-17” (and the exhibition seven years ago). The Swedish artist Anders Krisár has also trained as a classical pianist. Sharp photographs from heavenly and deserted shores and each photograph accompanied by a composed piano chord. There is an ominous and dark undertone in both photo and chord. Despite the beautiful scenery, an awareness of something else comes creeping upon us.
Didn’t I start up with writing about chess…and blogs should be short…this is probably not a blog. Too long and not updated enough times during a week.
Have you seen any of the amazing Medieval paintings by Albertus Pictor in churches around Stockholm? Stories for people who could not read Latin, stories for the priest to recall what to say? Death plays chess with a knight in the most famous painting by Albertus Pictor in the church of Täby. The walls were whitewashed during the 1700th Century, and we can be glad that someone couldn’t reach up to cover the ceiling and this story.
Death says on a text-ribbon by the painting: I play you checkmate. Ingmar Bergman was inspired by this painting when creating the film scene in “The Seventh Seal” (Det sjunde Inseglet) where Death approaches the knight Antonius Block on the seashore and Block asks: You have come for me?
Death: I have been for a long time at your side.
Block: I know.
Death: Are you prepared?
Block: My body is afraid, but I am not.
(Death approaches Block)
Block: Wait a moment.
Death: You all say that. But I give no respite.
Block: You play chess, do you not? … As long as I resist you, I live. If I win, you set me free.
For the Swedish reader you can continue to read an article by the chess-player and author Kristian Fredén, April 20th in Svenska Dagbladet on chess as a game of art.
http://www.svd.se/kulturnoje/understrecket/ett-spel-med-manga-drag-av-konstnarlighet_4587201.svd
He writes about Marcel Duchamps who once expressed that his existence appeared like a game of chess to him. And about Kasparov whose book is called “How Life imitates Chess” , where he states that chess is mostly a struggle, but it contains a creative process that is related to the artists.
To be creative - within a set of frames - and break out from.
Why do people carry on playing analogue chess? Fredén writes that the answer might be in the mixture of absolute clarity and mysticism, in the way one have to use both calculations and intuition?
I remember the feeling of holding a heavy wooden chessman, moving it on a board designed by the Russian chess master Gary Kasparov. In our store “Remi”, with the characteristic black-and white squares in the logotype, we had parlor games and home computers like Amiga, Atari and Commodore. Many years ago. But this particular board had a special charisma. It was during the time when humans still could win against the chess-machines, human minds were brilliant in comparison.
Still, intuition is for humans.
And yes, it was during the time of little Super Mario-Bros and his friends, when computer games were babies in comparison to the teenager-games of today.
salon gallerinatten malmö; lisa jeannin and rolf schuurm unknown pleasures art in public space ac/dc kulturhuset paul van der hoet jesper nordahl norrtälje konsthall nimis flisby sew together leif holmstrand ruth gibsson guido van der werve little boy elements a game of chess wanås; ann-sofi sidén noora schroderus wanås grand opening fantastic mr fox levi van veluw sluss-trollen rull storks' nest; signs artillery berlin gary carrion-murayari poland conceptual art daniel hoflund new york meissen anna nawrot kr wp brucennial fireworks danuta kuciak nathalie djurberg chaos roundabout supermarket 2011 supermarket art fair kulturcentrum ronneby henrik lund jørgensen marianne lindberg de geer peter johansson badewanne south baltic cross-border programme jan cardell cheering-machine julita wojcik goldin+senneby louise bourgeois submarine uss-torsk moderna museet nummer twaalf filippa barkman galleri 21 lisa jeannin 1500 visitors at opening bruno liljefors tova mozard slussen annika ström sharon hayes kaliningrad magnus bärtås kinetic sculpture parade; american visionary art m marianne vitale laznia cca twilight zone iwona zajac marina abramovic ncca kaliningrad ghardaia bogdan szyber crossmedia blekinge museum richard long galleri c hjärne lecture concert seven days in the art world; sarah thornton wol museum of visionary art kara walker lars vilks storytelling ferry project esther shalev-gerz eija-liisa ahtila carpets johannes nyholm maman janek simon roald dahl rolf schuurmans circel symbol knutte wester francesco bonami eu-application anna lundh the ocean henry darger where the wild things are artist collective tema klaipeda safe we like america and america likes us kader attia cindy sherman moma new york blekinge institute of technology dunkers art line maria friberg kalmar konstmuseum gdansk city gallery cca laznia bo christian larsson maria duncker baltimore kunsthalle rostock fortification godnatt mariusz tarkawian war kinetic sculpture parade justyna kuklo alessandra da pisa lithuania kerry tribe caravansarai istanbul linn fernström stockholm city planning hanna ljungh jenny holzer malte axelsson walead beshty roxy paine ingmar bergman kimmo schroderus silhouettes albertus pictor magnus wallin social realism avam bruno martelli kajsa dahlberg process of sorting and throwing sergei muchin rabbits migration art collections kultivator ragnar persson ludwigslust concrete walls the experiment lars brunström public sculpture white cube game of tag galeria biala chopin bruce high quality foundation artur zmijewski galeria ime bulgaria monsters american folk art museum mnky bzz group public art work whitney biennial 2010 malmö konsthall malin holmberg remi ari saarto ice-hole swimming åsa maria bengtsson elastic lisa jonasson anders krisar bill viola rumänska kulturinstitutet glitch art arx der wanderer; elina brotherus; torbjørn rødland tatu caravansarai drawings angus young spatial planning oscar guermouche ann edholm vilniuis art academy performance carina reich kunsthal charlottenborg baltic sea cultural centre pink poodle cca laznia gdansk zombie-walk germany kate gilmore nationalgalleriet the national public art council vernacular artists tales from the forest gdansk cultural capital 2016 round buildings the f-word lászlo moholy-nagy anne thulin kasparov anita malmqvist market 2011 katarzyna josefowicz maarit-suomi-vännänen modernautställningen 2010 rauma biennale balticum producers anna brag paul neagu rebecca hoffberger charlotta östlund eu joseph beuys spunk lisa gerdin caspar david friedrich karlskrona konsthall kristianstad konsthall helene hortlund horse
Ivar Wenster » Spunk-mission in New York and Baltimore: ”Hej Du Missa inte High Line Midtown West. En fantastisk park på järnvägsspår. Ja..”
Thomas Olsson » The Ocean in the leading part: ”Låter som en spännande idé att visa verk ur samlingen tillsammans med Daniel Hof..”
Anders » New adventures in Wonderland: ”Mycket spännande på gång ser jag! Hur hinner du?”