Monday, October 31, 2011

Mark Dion, Mess Conference, 2004

I know the date is a bit off for our limits, but oh well.



In March 2003, the U.S. invaded Iraq; pictures from the Abu Ghuraib prison triggered worldwide consternation in May 2004 and protests were fired against the military deployment there. Mark Dion’s installation Mess Conference also represents a reaction to the events in Iraq.
The props are arranged in the space as if on a stage: a speaker’s lectern with microphone, behind it a dark blue curtain, in addition a bookcase on rollers and an American flag that can be set up beside or behind the lectern. Various items of clothing hang on a coat rack; the artist invites visitors to select and slip on a U.S. Army administration officer’s uniform, the conservative suit of a Republican senator, or the coat and headscarf of a Muslim UNICEF delegate. The corresponding seals of office are attached to the lectern as required. It is then possible to pose for a black and white photograph, which later becomes part of the installation. Mess Conference sarcastically comments on the staging of political power.
Playing with different identities – primarily the role of the expert or scientist, into which the artist himself slips frequently – has defined Mark Dion’s work since the mid 1980s. In his performance-based works and installations that use a wealth of materials, he investigates the mechanisms employed to write “official history.” In this context, for Dion the role of objects and their classification is decisive, a key theme that he has also examined in his works about our relation to nature as well as its representation in natural history museums and in the sciences.

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