Pepo Salazar at SABOT

Artist: Pepo Salazar

Exhibition title: Reinforcement of good responses

Venue: SABOT, Cluj-Napoca, Romania

Date: September 29 – November 30

Photography: Pavel & Petruta  / all images copyright and courtesy of the artist and SABOT, Cluj-Napoca

“The truth is that, in general and with the exception of a few cases where it’s myself talking about my work, I’m not in favor of press release sheets or other additions that surround, or are imposed on works of art. I don’t really agree with the idea of hyper-mediation that characterizes our age. This is because I believe that works of art must enjoy maximum autonomy if they are not to be reduced to mere metaphors, archives or illustrations of the given. Works of art must free themselves from the authoritarianism of the concept and the super-signifying (capitalist) apparatus because, if we look closely, the latter strives, often ideologically, to transform the subject into a consumer; it transforms works of art into closed products, dependent on something external (which we call a system), in order to add a meaning to them which then becomes a function. Like yet another commodity governed by instrumental functioning. And this contradicts the fundamental idea that works of art should move away from our most stable foundations by dissolving or questioning existing frameworks.

Aesthetic operations are worthwhile when they don’t translate, when they don’t transfer, because it’s by opening themselves up to powerlessness that they can provoke a space of freedom in which thought is not a prisoner of its automatisms or of dominant semiologies and conventions; by suspending the normal coordinates of sensory experience, the subject can arrive at formulations of himself and of the world that are not mere expressive gestures or simple documentations.

Works of art do not signify, rather, they “sensitize”, they generate meaning and thought, but thought without knowledge, non-instrumental thought; they are impressions that live on in impressions.

We never talk about what we see, or, as Deleuze puts it, “what we see never resides in what we say…. Inexact expressions are needed to designate something exactly”. In everyday language, we talk about things, but they don’t care what we’re talking about. If art produces thought, it does so only by recreating in the viewer the process that made it present. What the work “signifies” is fundamentally a presence arising from the human being, and as such, artworks are presentations; if nothing signifies much (what does the world signify?), why should artworks signify anything other than their own presence / transparency and activation of the thought process that has not yet been instrumentalized?

Some works of art (the most autonomous) present, others represent, but both lay bare their process, making it visible so that the viewer can recreate them and participate in the speculative and performative processes that generated them; it is performance. On the other hand, metaphor alone is insufficient. Works must be excessive, infinite equivalences  performed in a rhizomatic device.

LOVE AFFAIR CAPITALISM WITH IMAGE

Perhaps because I believe that hyper-subjectification has become one of the most powerful signs of unscrupulous capitalism, I want to escape my own singularity and avoid all my work having a brand, a style (which is why I change every time). Today, I want to de-identify, de-subjectivize even more, I want my pieces to be just as disaffected (the affects?) while protecting themselves from clarification, function, convention and the semiological limit. Guattari said that power can only be maintained insofar as it relies on the dominant semiologies of signification.

For all these reasons, I don’t want to make simple tropes or have my pieces belong to a specific medium. Nor do I want to participate in a system (rather, an amorphous device), to be a craftsman or a producer, or to work with gestures and materials that are not only banal, but increasingly disaffected and insignificant. I avoid persuading or giving moral lessons. I don’t sell anything. And I protect myself from explanation because I’m changing.”

Pepo Salazar Lacruz is a Basque artist living and working in Paris. Throughout his artistic career, he has developed a multidisciplinary practice encompassing sculpture and installation but extending to other media such as music and sound, writing, collage, performance, editions and the moving image, among others. Often working with everyday objects, ranging from the banal to the absurd, from the over-conceptualized to the ideologically charged, Pepo Salazar Lacruz arranges them in new constellations while seeking to subvert the objects’ symbolic values to bring out a new meaning, a critical abstraction of reality. Thus, his works contain an inherent critique of, for example, capitalism, its institutions, consumer culture and the influence of mass media, but strongly avoid asserting a single perception and interpretation. Instead, the artist’s rhizomatic, fluid approach sees objects as their own agents, actively producing inconsistencies and autonomous performativity.

In 2015, Salazar Lacruz represented Spain at the 56th Venice Biennale.