Ulrik Heltoft: Counted, Weighed, Divided

12345678910111213141516171819202122232425

Picture 486

Ulrik Heltoft,18. A fontain in a park. No people, 2006
Pigment print, framed with engraved title in passepartout
Framed: 91x74 cm, photo: 18,5 x 15 cm
Ed of 3 + 1AP

It is a great pleasure to present the Danish artist Ulrik Heltoft’s second solo show in the gallery during the period October 28th – December 16th 2006. The exhibition Counted, Weighed, Divided consists of 19 photographs which make up the first part of an ongoing series.

The inspiration to the series of photographs comes from the French Surrealist writer Raymond Roussel’s Nouvelles Impressions d’Afrique (1928). The book was initiated in 1915 and Roussel spent 15 hours on writing each of the 1276 lines of the 40-pages long poem. In order to increase the thickness of the book, the text was only printed on every other side. Through a detective agency he hired the painter Henri Zo to contribute with illustrations, which were to be inserted between the text, hidden in the gap of the uncut pages. Roussel himself was never in contact with the painter, who received 59 brief and precise instructions for illustrations such as: A man, bust only, in profile (right profile) aiming at something with a pistol (one cannot see what he is aiming at).

Ulrik Heltoft has used Roussel’s instructions to create the photographs in this exhibition. The historical material is here transformed to photography, unfolding new contemporary narratives. The photographs are part of a rather closed system and at first difficult to place. The situations are not strange and unknown, but their internal relations point in many different directions which it is up to the individual viewer to follow. The formal works are situated at a level of abstraction where very little is given in advance. The dimensions of the frames are alike while the sizes of the photographs vary, so that the viewer is forced to move closer or further away from the works to change focus from detail to whole and backwards. Like fragtments or clues from a detective story, each element intrigues the viewer to make endless combinations of juxtapositions and contractions. The linguistic matter-of-factness of the instructions adds an almost emblematic character to the photographs, as if A very old, very sturdy oak was exactly the essence of the general idea of an old tree detached from time and space. They are not psychological portraits of types or persons, but pictures of external and characteristic aspects that leave you with an impression more than an insight.

Heltoft has previosly worked with instructions from other artists. Last time it was a given instruction, and now a found one. By using other artists’ work as source material, he comments on the myths of artistic innovation and originality and undermines the traditional idea of authority. The outcome of the exchange is very unpredictable and Heltoft often works with coincidences, unspotted details and the formation of communication and meaning. The idea based works are sharp, fine and quibbling and require a concentrated attention because of their subtlety.

The title of the exhibition is taken from one of the exhibited works. Counted, Weighed, Divided refers to the expression to see “the writing on the wall”. It forms part of a biblical quote where a hand writes on the wall “Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin”, which means ”number, number, weight, division”, and thereby foresees the division and delegation of the Babylonian Empire. The popular understanding of this omen considers the ability to see what will come. With this an invitation to try and read the signs on the wall in the gallery.

The exhibition has been supported by The Danish Art Council.

Ghost

Contemporary Art

Sturlasgade 12B

DK - 2300 Copenhagen S

T +45 3295 4600

F +45 3295 4606

E bk@kirkhoff.dk

W kirkhoff.dk

Paper dot