Infos

Titre
Jo Kox | Kevin muhlen | Ceci n'est pas un Casino
Intervenant
Bruno Flash
Durée
11:54
Evénement
Ceci n'est pas un casino
Lieu
Casino Luxembourg Forum d'Art Contemporain
Affiche
Mission687
Tags
ceci n'est pas un casinocasino luxembourg
Autres publications de Bruno Flash
Noflash

Creative Commons License

Commentaires du réalisateur
CURATORS: KEVIN MUHLEN, JO KOXWhen referring to Casino Luxembourg – Forum d’art contemporain, perhaps no phrase has been uttered more often than, “This is not a casino!” After all, the name of the centre can fool almost anyone into mistaking the purpose of the building. The current exhibition sets the tone by adopting this title, further adding to the confusion by exhibiting works that, in fact, evoke the idea of gaming! Indeed, each piece in the show appears to be an invita-tion to play—whether video console, merry-go-round, playing ?eld, or other games. And yet the reality remains unchanged—no gaming goes on here.The exhibition therefore reproduces the frustration experienced by visitors who come here thinking they will ?nd games of chance. This theme could have easily resulted in yet another show on the relationship between art and playfulness. But what is under-scored here is the double twist and frustration associated with gaming. Art and game-playing—which have often been compared in recent art criticism—are in fact similar practices: both call for (indeed, embody) a free spirit on the one hand, and a precise set of rules on the other hand. Both tend to set up binary oppositions that give rise to meanings, symbols and related emotions—like a goal that has either been scored or not scored, once and for all, a status that inherently generates intense, wide-ranging reactions from everyone involved (players, referees, spectators, commentators, TV viewers). This relationship between binary status and analogue reaction is speci?c to games yet is mirrored in the artistic techniques employed in these works.A participatory element is however also present in this show. The visi-tor becomes a player, spontaneously drawn into the exhibition with all its subversions and frustrations—visitors may even feel they’re being toyed with. Sixteen artists present their own approaches, chosen according to the rules of this non-casino. Several artists produced site-speci?c works for this show.Taking ambiguity to its logical limit, the ?fteenth anniversary of the Casino Luxembourg’s transformation into an exhibition venue is—and isn’t—the inspiration behind Ceci n‘est pas un Casino. There is nothing retrospective about this show, and the only histori-cal allusion is the thematic reference. However, the retrospective notion is openly expressed in the catalogue, which, in addition to an introduction by the curators, features essays on the Casino and its various functions down through history by Marc Jeck, Paul Reiles, and Didier Damiani, not to men-tion a discussion of playfulness and gaming by the psychiatrist Paul Rauchs, and a historical analysis of ludic ap-proaches to art by
Commentaires des utilisateurs
che casino! Mardi 01 Juin 2010 par Leonora Bisagno

extra vidéos et intéressant la prèsentation de Jo Kox