Illusion for a second
Jeppe Hein is the mastermind and leading force behind Karriere bar and, very appropriately, his artistic contribution is the bar counter itself. Twelve metres long and sitting at the heart of the space, the bar counter gently oscillates from side to side. Drinks and handbags are constantly sliding about a bit, causing slight bemusement: Hey! Have you just taken my drink? Or have I had a bit too much already? The element of surprise, as so often in Hein’s works, is the entry point to the piece. This can have a decidedly intoxicating effect on the ‘participant’, which leads to Hein’s works’ attenuating the normal distances between people, and between work and viewer. In Hein’s pieces, space, artwork and audience are closely connected. In this respect, his practice arguably represents an extension of developments in sculpture as well as site-specific and conceptual art from the 1960s onward. The same is true of his sculptural idiom. Jeppe Hein works with a wide range of materials and art forms: water, neon, fire, balls, cubes – and nothing at all. In the work Invisible Labyrinth (2005), you are invited to range around in a large empty museum space wearing a headband fitted with sensors. When it vibrates, it is an indication that you have collided with the walls of the maze, and a cue to change direction and find your way through the empty space while gradually forming an idea of its ‘layout’. The labyrinth reveals individual dispositions. There are those who follow the herd and there are those who follow their own path. And then there are those who simply quit the labyrinth because there is nothing there to see. These last are in the minority, however, since interacting with Hein’s works is fun. Jeppe Hein challenges the classic understanding of art as pure aesthetics, and not least the traditional distance between artwork and viewer, familiar to us from museums and tony galleries, is something he blasts away. By the same token in the public realm, his works are never allowed to constellate in passive clusters in a square. In one gallery exhibition, he had a large steel ball with sensors and a motor roll around the space – 360 Presence. The more numerous the visitors, the more uncontrollably the ball rolled about, ending up smashing into walls and electric sockets with visitors leaping from side to side. Only when all had left of the space did the ball slow down. The work is a crisp comment on the delusional control we believe ourselves to have over art and nature. But, back to the bar at Karriere… Here too things can get a bit lively, but, happily, to have our received ideas about art upended, it’s enough to move our feet in tandem with the bar. (PKE)
Jeppe Hein, born 1974, Denmark
www.jeppehein.net