In the instant of memory, everything was swirling and dissolving
Christian Kosmas Mayer
450 Polaroids from the shotting of the film “The Mission” (1986, directed by Roland Joffé), in 10 frames with 45 Polaroids each
each 70 × 104 cm
2009
Acquisition 2010
Inv. No. 0202 a-j
Ornament and enlightenment do not necessarily contradict each other. Christian Mayer, with his interest in the history of civilization, unearths historical images, yet does not expose them directly, but sends the beholder on a detour by covering his found objects with a decorative veil – a filter that delays the transmission of knowledge, which is the artist’s actual intention. Often, the material is presented in ornamental arrangements, as a large picture in space or – on EVN’s Christmas card for 2008 – as a dark silhouette against gold ground. Under the title of
The expansive work acquired for the evn collection in 2010 consists of 450 Polaroids and also leads us into the realm of Latin American history and legend. However, the first encounter with the work does not reveal what it is about: one is confronted with grid-structured panels and a flood of colorful images. Sometimes one can see the photographs, sometimes their reverse sides, and one assumes that an archival order might be behind this presentation. Indeed the pictures are grouped thematically, bearing such titles as Hunters, Fire, or Colonial Interior.
The Polaroids were taken in 1986. They document the shooting of the monumental film The Mission by Roland Joffé, starring Robert de Niro and Jeremy Irons. Ennio Morricone’s opulent soundtrack has become famous. This history film deals with an experiment of the Jesuits, who in the seventeenth century wanted to establish a Catholic “state” in the Paraguayan jungle that was to be put under the protection of Portuguese troops in order to convert the native Guarani people and integrate them into a Christian community. The project ended with a massacre. Christian Mayer arranged the pictures in such a way that all direct clues connected with the film’s shooting (cameras, actors, technical equipment, etc.) are hidden. Thus an interplay has been created between the invisible and the obvious. Yet also what is visible of the tropical world engulfs a mystery: for an entire village in
Wolfgang Kos, Heike Maier-Rieper, 2011 (translation: Wolfgang Astelbauer)
1) In a conversation the artist mentioned that Joffé had originally been looking for certain types of villages in the area of the
Exhibitions
Now, At The Latest. videos and other attractions from the evn collection, Kunsthalle Krems, Krems, 2015
Kardinal-König-Kunstfonds Preisträgerausstellung, Kardinal-König-Kunstfonds, Salzburg, 2011
Publications
Now, At the Latest, Maria Enzersdorf 2015, p. 14 f
evn collection. 2006–2011, Cologne 2011, p. 176–185
K wie Kunst, Kardinal König Kunstpreis Salzburg 2011, Salzburg 2011, p. 40 ff & Cover
The Mission. Ein Film von Roland Joffé, 2007