Noe Sendas: Museu da Electricidade.
Amado, Miguel
The title of his recent exhibition, "The Collector,"
defines the creative process of the Berlin-based Portuguese artist Noe
Sendas. Since the beginning of his career, in the mid-'90s, he has
developed an oeuvre based on the politics of collecting. In his videos,
sculptures, and digital photographic collages he brings together diverse
components of Western culture and, like a DJ armed with a sampler, mixes
them in order to assign them new meanings. In many of his works one
recognizes influences from literature and cinema--for example, citations
from Joyce and Beckett, Hitchcock and Godard. These references become,
further, part of an exploration of the age-old theme of the Double, an
exploration in which self-representation often plays a significant
role--for instance, in a series of realistic life-size figures molded
from the artist's own body.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Ten years after his solo debut, this exhibition summarizes
Sendas's practice, despite comprising only one sculpture and a
group of twenty-one digital photographic collages. The project is
inspired by a passage in Walter Benjamin's Arcades Project (1927-40): "The collector ... brings together what belongs
together; by keeping in mind their affinities and their succession in
time, he can eventually furnish information about his objects.... As far
as the collector is concerned, his collection is never complete; for let
him discover just a single piece missing, and everything he has
collected remains a patchwork." Informed by these words, the works
on view are a collection of self-portraits, through which Sendas
examines this historical mode of introspection derived from the artistic
way of life as an iconographic device, with particular reference to the
self-portraits of canonical artists from the Renaissance to the present.
The Collector (all works 2007) is a smartly dressed mannequin
sitting on a folding chair. By cutting out its eyes, nose, and mouth,
Sendas has disfigured it in a way that recalls the slashes in the
canvases found in the studio of Francis Bacon after his death and also
Rene Magritte's famous painting The Son of Man, 1964, in which a
man's face is replaced by a green apple. Approaching the life-size
figure, one sees that the inside of the face houses a smoked-glass
mirror--similar to those sometimes used by painters making
self-portraits--which reflects one's own face, thus transforming
the observer into the observed. (Sendas earlier manipulated the gaze via
optical mechanisms in Eye Cast, 2005, an object in which the viewer
looks through a keyhole and sees someone looking back.)
This play between observer and observed is repeated in the digital
photocollages, composite portraits of famous artists who here gazed out
toward the center of the gallery, where the sculpture was placed. The
self-portrait images are cut and pasted in elegant combinations that
evoke modernist aesthetics--for example, Sarah Lucas and Velazquez,
Velazquez and Durer, Durer and Mapplethorpe. Andy Warhol's face
meets that of the Portuguese Aurelia de Sousa, while Bruce Nauman can be
found in a pairing with Goya that possesses a rare, albeit grotesque,
beauty. In deconstructing and reconfiguring these well-known faces of
Western art, Sendas satisfies his iconoclastic impulse.
--Miguel Amado
Translated from Portuguese by Clifford E. Landers.