Villains and Heroes

opening: vr 3 september 2010 om 20:00 uur

3 sep 2010
4 okt 2010

This exhibition is the first collaboration between Marco Pando and Sascha Pohle.

The exhibition Villains and Heroes deals with notions of the exotic other, where forms of rewriting, appropriating of found footage or documents such as cartoons, photographs and objects set the artistic approach. Through their different practices, both artists reflect on the Western representation of the image of the ‘Indian’.

Vergroot

Villains and Heroes - bron

With:

Marco Pando

Marco Pando’s Tintin back to Peru has its starting point in the cartoon ‘Prisoners of the Sun’ by Hergé (1907 – 1983). In his new project, the Peruvian artist follows the footsteps of Tintin to confront his image of his native country against the stereotypical represented image by the Belgian cartoonist. With a focus on the relation between fictive and real landscapes, Pando writes a new storyboard in the form of modified cartoon pages, where his own drawings and photographs of his journey replace the original images.

Sascha Pohle

Sascha Pohle’s installation German Indian deals with the widespread phenomenon of impersonation of Native Americans in Germany. Like Hergé who has never visited Peru, the German writer Karl May (1842 – 1912) had never been in the countries where his adventure novels took place. Following May’s legacy in his exotic fictional adventures, joined with romanticized notions and identifications with the Indian, there was a strong Indian Hobby throughout Germany since the early 20th century, which continued to exist in both Germanys (former GDR and West Germany) until today. The installation German Indian simulates an ethnographic museum display, which evolves questions about the ambiguities of authenticity, identity and authorship by using Pohle’s re-appropriated Hobby Indian objects, such as re-drawings, re-photographs, re-edited 16 mm film footage and ‘indianistic’ artifacts.

The exhibition title Villains and Heroes draws reference to memories of a childhood role-playing game of Cowboys versus Indians. In the image accompanying the invitation you can see Hergé (first on the left) at a Belgian scout camp in 1922, feathered and wrapped up in a blanket as a North American Indian, fully entering into the spirit of the fantasy.