Performing Evidence

14 Jul 2009
25 Aug 2009

The group exhibition Performing Evidence brings together works by contemporary artists juxtaposed with historical material and explores the role that visual practices play in shaping our behaviour.

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Guy Ben-Ner, Wildboy, 2004, video still. Courtesy Galerie Konrad Fischer -

Operating on the basis of the ‘before and after’ logic, historical documents were often demonstrative of a transformation: traumatized soldiers being cured, workers adapting to new roles, the disadvantaged child developed into a worthy citizen. But the making of these documents is not only a means of constructing proof that the subjects in the image were transformed; it becomes in itself part of that transformation, as it engages the soldiers, workers or children in the enactment of a developmental scenario.

It is the effect of such representational practices upon our self-understanding and conduct that is negotiated by the contemporary works in the exhibition. The artists explore how different representational forms – press briefings, virtual reality exposure therapy, roleplay trainings, reality TV – make us feel and act in certain ways. Performing Evidence suggests that such shaping of sentiments, attitudes and actions can be traced back to the early twentieth century.