Contributors: Mathew Kneebone, Olivier Goethals, Albert Lamorisse, Jean Claude Duparc
Exhibition title: The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse
Curated by: Maziar Afrassiabi
Venue: Rib, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Date: September 24 – November 26, 2021
Photography: Lotte Stekelenburg / all images copyright and courtesy of the artists and Rib, Rotterdam
An introduction
Thinking about the future of Rib while developing a new chapter in its history, we thought about Rib’s end too, its finality. We cannot hide the fact that as we go on with our business, feelings of futility loom, in a world whose ending and ends have almost fully overlapped. We thought about the relation between this double meaning of the word end: the possibility of ending and the question of to what purpose one must endure?
Can Rib as an ‘institution’ be a means without end; a reflexive and self-conscious process; an apocalyptic space: a space of revelation?
Far from a thematic show, The Last Terminal, is an adventure of reflexivity, rethinking the social function of an exhibition, not only what we see but also how we see it.
We begin with an initial parameter, Le vent des amoureux (Baade Sabaa, 1978), a film by the late French director Albert Lamorisse (1922–1970) and his uneasy relation with his client the Shah of Iran. We will go beyond the conventional practicalities of exhibition making which always involve a kind of pacification and bracketing of spaces and frames (fill the holes, paint the walls, remove trash, hide the cables, the finances and reports, relations between all participants, changing neighborhood, the outlook of the art world) and work with the sustaining but nevertheless necessarily always problematic infrastructure of the space and the program itself.
In 1968, Lamorisse was asked by the Iranian Ministry of Arts and Culture to make a documentary about Iran—Le vent des amoureux as part of the Shah’s propaganda campaign. The film is an aerial epic, mainly told through the voice of the wind that skims over the rural desert regions of Iran. However, the Shah disapproved of the result and asked for additional footage that would show the developing industries, laboratories and factories, including an important milestone—the Amir Kabir Dam constructed between 1957–1961 by the US firm Morrison Knudsen Co.
In 1970, Le vent des amoureux’ ending was literally cut with the death of its author. While recording aerial footage over the Amir Kabir Dam in Iran his helicopter became entangled with suspended wires and crashed leading to his and his crew’s death. The camera was later recovered from the bottom of the river and the film was edited according to his written instructions by his wife, Jean Claude Duparc, who often acted as the script girl and assistant director in his films, his son Pascal and the remaining crew who completed the film eight years later with a postscript. The film was nominated for an Oscar in 1978.
This extra footage resulted in a post script of 7 minutes long, which in a sense represents Lamorisse’s unwillingness to make propaganda for the ruler compromising his artistic integrity. In the new film the steady gliding aerial shots of Le vent des amoureux have been replaced by a nervous and pronounced edit. The visual material has been edited in an accelerated manner and the accompanying music is tense. Laboratories and factories seem full of threat, the machines without souls and human figures appear like zombies. The result is a disturbing portrait of the Shah’s coveted modernization. It is in a sense a harbinger of the revolution to follow in 1979.
In the first chapter of this program artist Mathew Kneebone has created a work that electrically connects to Rib’s infrastructure. His intervention will—in real-time—trigger blackouts in the building when they occur in his state of California. Rib and our operations including other works on display depend on electricity to function. Will the show end without it? Will it be incomplete? Will we need to burn wood and light candles during winter days? What will a blackout generate? It may induce liminality at Rib forcing us to redefine how we operate and interact.
The imminent ending of the operational status quo at Rib instigated by Kneebone is a transcription of how Lamorisse’s film was cut short as a direct result of the divergent expectations between artist and client leading to the helicopter crash which finally made the camera stop recording.
Artist and architect Olivier Goethals has developed the first stage of an spatial intervention consisting of functional elements and display options as empty signifiers and placeholders for other works which may yet find their place in the program.
These two works which are a response to the space and our initial gesture (Le vent des amoureux) will be introduced at the level of and affecting Rib’s infrastructural conditions and throw it into a mist of uncertainty, anxiety and potentialities inviting and making visible this already existing condition in our field and in the world
Overview from the street. The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations and Olivier Goethals scenography, September 2021
Overview from the street. The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations and Olivier Goethals scenography, September 2021
Overview from the street. The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations and Olivier Goethals scenography, September 2021
Overview from the street. The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations and Olivier Goethals scenography, September 2021
Overview from the street. The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations and Olivier Goethals scenography, September 2021
Overview from the street. The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations and Olivier Goethals scenography, September 2021
Overview from the street. The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations and Olivier Goethals scenography, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Olivier Goethals scenography and installation view Albert Lamorisse, Right: Baadeh Sabah/The Lovers’ Wind/ Vent Des Amoureux 1970/1978, Left: Title Unknown (Postscript to Baadeh Sabah) 1970/1978, September 2021
Installation view, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Albert Lamorisse, Right: Baadeh Sabah/The Lovers’ Wind/ Vent Des Amoureux 1970/1978, Left: Title Unknown (Postscript to Baadeh Sabah) 1970/1978, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Olivier Goethals scenography and installation view Albert Lamorisse, Right: Baadeh Sabah/The Lovers’ Wind/ Vent Des Amoureux 1970/1978, Left: Title Unknown (Postscript to Baadeh Sabah) 1970/1978, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Olivier Goethals scenography and installation view Albert Lamorisse, Right: Baadeh Sabah/The Lovers’ Wind/ Vent Des Amoureux 1970/1978, Left: Title Unknown (Postscript to Baadeh Sabah) 1970/1978, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations, extended fuse box, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations, extended fuse box, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations, extended fuse box, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations, extended fuse box, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Olivier Goethals scenography and Mathew Kneebone Power Relations, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Olivier Goethals scenography, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Olivier Goethals scenography, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Olivier Goethals scenography, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Olivier Goethals scenography, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Olivier Goethals scenography, September 2021
Installation view, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations and Olivier Goethals scenography, during a blackout, September 2021
Installation view, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations and Olivier Goethals scenography, during a blackout, September 2021
Installation view, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Albert Lamorisse, Right: Baadeh Sabah/The Lovers’ Wind/ Vent Des Amoureux 1970/1978, Left: Title Unknown (Postscript to Baadeh Sabah) 1970/1978, during a blackout, September 2021
Installation view, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Olivier Goethals scenography, during a blackout, September 2021
Installation view, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Olivier Goethals scenography, during a blackout, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations, extended fuse box, during a blackout, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations, shop front notice during a blackout, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations, shop front notice during a blackout, September 2021
Detail, The Last Terminal: Reflections on the Coming Apocalypse, Mathew Kneebone Power Relations, shop front notice during a blackout, September 2021