The artist’s epic installation gives a new meaning to time based art in a former Neukölln brewery
“Olympia,” 2016
SLEEK: So what is the film about?
David Claerbout: The film’s subject is based on supposedly “utopian” systems that offer parallel modes of duration and time. At the beginning they seem very attractive but they’re very difficult to deliver. It’s very easy, for example, to imagine a Third Reich that lasts 1,000 years, but much harder to follow up on. Whether it’s a Thousand-Year Reich or a piece of software, they both hold an ephemeral promise of eternity.
Not at all, I’m counting on its disintegration. And besides, I’m only contractually committed to it for the next 25.
Even 25 years is a long time for a work based on code, given how fast technology changes. Are you thinking ahead?
I see the piece as a living organism that needs to be fed. Certain things can be planned for, like the weather and the seasons. But other things need to be checked daily so that they can be updated, and we can change our approach if necessary.
David Claerbout, photographed by Neven Allgeier
It sounds like you just had a child!
Exactly, and now I find myself waking up to the idea that this piece will be with me until I die. Which is a very uncomfortable feeling, because even if I would like to kill the project I couldn’t without upsetting people. I realise that is going to be part of my legacy, and possibly one of my most ‘spot-on’ works, at least I hope so.
While it’s true that the work doesn’t contain any direct remarks or criticism of the Third Reich, I am in fact deconstructing the building, turning it over to time, radically. Yes, you could argue that there is a collaborative aspect in the aesthetics: I keep my camera in the same track as Leni Riefenstahl would have kept it, as if the camera could have gone on forever. And I’m only deconstructing it and turning it around radically over time. The only real tool in every piece of my work is duration, it is duration that does the real job of vengeance.
David Claerbout’s “Olympia” is on display at the KINDL – Centre for Contemporary Art until 28 May 2017
Taken from SLEEK 52