October 27 & 28 at Kunsthuis Syb: A PIECE OF BLUE VELVET HANGING is a two-day exhibition by Ben Cain and Jort van der Laan (DAI, 2011) that's concerned with the changing definitions of, and the porosity between bodies and things.
13.00 – 17.00 Ben Cain (UK, 1975) and Jort van der Laan (NL, 1986) were selected for a two-stage residency program organized by the King’s College Centre for Philosophy and Visual Arts (CPVA) and Kunsthuis SYB. Talking to, talking with, talking at. Listening to. Looking, being looked at. Exchanging, exchanging glances. Giving, receiving, refusing. All these events, processes, or moments, whatever you want to call them, might involve affect and therefore some form of production, and perhaps some form of change? So, I’m talking about the affect of people on things and vice versa. The physical give and take, to-ing and fro-ing that we perform when we negotiate other things and other bodies, sometimes mistaking one for the other, a body for a thing (which of course has massive political implications). Handling something or somebody, imaging handling something, the weight, the temperature, the texture, the responsibility, the degree of live-ness. Are we allowed to handle it? I can’t handle that. Can you handle it? While in residency at SYB, Ben Cain would like to consider these questions through the process of arranging found and purpose-made objects in spaces, whilst more or less at the same time trying to think about what a productive encounter might be, or look like, or feel like. |
Ben Cain lives and works in London and Zagreb. Ben completed his MA at Jan van Eyck Akademie, Maastricht in 2000, and a BA in Interactive Art in Manchester in 1997. Throughout his career he has worked with sculpture, installation, theatre, sound, performance, and publication. Ben Cain's practice deals with themes of work, labour, and artistic action. He has recurrently explored art’s ambiguous relationship to industry, commodification and immaterial labour, and is interested in how artworks might pose questions about what we think they are doing and, by implication, our role as viewers in their social and cultural production. His work has been exhibited internationally including Manifesta 9; Busan Biennale, South Korea; Croatian Pavilion at 56th Venice Biennale (with Tina Gverović), Wiels, Brussels; Supplement, New York; Grundy Art Gallery, Blackpool; Turner Contemporary, Margate; BlueCoat Gallery, Liverpool; South London Gallery, London. He is a tutor in Fine Art at Central Saint Martins, he runs a residency programme at CASS School of Art, both in London; and he works as a professor at WHW Academy in Zagreb. |