SYSTEMS

Launched in 2012 in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Leonard & Bina Ellen Art Gallery’s Permanent Collection, the SIGHTINGS satellite exhibition program was conceived as an experimental platform to critically reflect upon the possibilities and limitations of the modernist “white cube.” As part of this program, artists and curators are invited to develop projects for a cubic display unit located in a public space at the university, with the aim of generating new strategies for art dissemination.

Since 2015, programming for SIGHTINGS has explored an annual thematic—work/labor, pedagogy, and psychopathologies—that re-examines the exhibition display’s formal, conceptual, historical and contextual parameters in light of current sociocultural issues. Focusing on the notion of systems, the 2018-2019 edition addresses how the systematicity of the art world corresponds with that of the real world as considered in its various dimensions (political, social, and economic, among others). Accordingly, this cycle of projects continues the critique of the white cube as a “closed system” at the origin of SIGHTINGS and revisits the legacy of conceptualism by drawing attention to power dynamics, contradictions and flaws inherent to these systems.

The SIGHTINGS program is developed by Katrie Chagnon.

SIGHTINGS is located on the ground floor of the Hall Building at 1455 De Maisonneuve Blvd. West and is accessible weekdays and weekends from 7 am to 11 pm.

SIGHTINGS 26
I+CARE
Ahreum Lee, I+CARE, 2019. Photo: Anne-Marie Trépanier
Ahreum Lee, I+CARE, 2019. Photo: Anne-Marie Trépanier
Ahreum Lee, I+CARE, 2019. Performers: Ahreum Lee, Emilie Morin, Laure Plan, Alexandra Bischoff. Photo: Robin Simpson
Ahreum Lee, I+CARE, 2019. Courtesy of the artist
Ahreum Lee, I+CARE, 2019. Performers: Ahreum Lee, Emilie Morin, Laure Plan, Alexandra Bischoff. Photo: Robin Simpson
Open

January 25 – May 12, 2019

A project by Ahreum Lee

Maybe I can call my generation the IKEA generation.

In this brand, I see a conflict of desires. People want to have nice furniture but they, or we, don’t have money for it. So IKEA products ask people to assemble and disassemble their own furniture to keep the costs low. DIY culture is marketed to us as a value, but it is really tied up with the capitalist system. Somehow this brand has found a way to turn our labour into something trendy. IKEA is not the only company to do this, but it might be the most iconic. Our economy is transitioning to a model where we perform tasks for ourselves that used to be paid labour by employees. This is disguised as a convenience but it’s actually creating more work and anxiety for this generation. We are paying the price for our “convenience” while companies profit from the unpaid labour of their customers.

We are the generation of shadow labour.

There is, of course, a diversity of relationships that people of my generation have with IKEA, however, one of the main draws of the brand for everyone is that it suits the culture of fast fashion. It can be bought cheaply and so thrown away easily. This suits the nomadic, unstable life of many in my generation. Fewer and fewer young people are planning to buy a prominent home and settle. In some cases this a deliberate choice, but in the case of a great deal of “millennials”, the notion of homeownership has never even occurred to them because the costs make it so ridiculously unattainable. The popularity of IKEA goes hand in hand with my generation’s constant state of impermanence. The idea of a permanent place or career feels like an antiquated notion of another time.

We are the generation of planned obsolescence.

When I look around I see the commodification of everything, even my own health. I can imagine a world sometime in the near future where this concept of DIY as a virtue creeps its way further and further into the realm of health care. The very companies that exploit us for labour will be the ones selling us DIY remedies for our health problems caused by our constant stress and anxiety. We must be the ones responsible for our own care so that we can stay happy and most of all productive! Is there a limit of the care one can be expected to be able to give to oneself?

This installation, I+CARE, mimics an advertisement and a set of IKEA-style instructions for imagined self-care, DIY medical equipment for a home in the near future. The work is a meditation on the alienation and anxiety caused by the shadow labour market of our neoliberal economies. The “Do It Yourself” culture constantly being marketed to us as a form of empowerment, is, in fact, a cost-cutting measure where labour previously done by employees is being offloaded on to consumers. These surrealistic instructions for home equipment mock the ubiquity of commercial ads for DIY products and expose their system of influence. These impossible health machine DIY kits portray a future where one imagines that every stress-related medical problem could be solved by oneself. I+CARE intends to illuminate the anxiety of living in non-permanent residences in a capital-oriented society as well as the rhetorical power of positive lifestyle marketing permeating urban culture through “do it yourself” and “self-care” commercial ads. The public nature and location of the Sightings cube make it an ideal space to display such ads that, sadly, could be taken as real in the surreal world of late-capitalism.

Ahreum Lee

Ahreum Lee is a musician and interdisciplinary media artist from Seoul, South Korea currently based in Montreal. Lee began her career in media arts as the co-founder and frontwoman of an experimental art-rock band Juck Juck Grunzie. After spending nearly a decade producing records and touring internationally with the group, she began to extend her practice into video and multimedia installation work. Through a variety of media, Lee is interested in examining the feedback loop between the individual and society. How are fears and anxieties hidden within the power dynamics of society? How can one subvert the power dynamics in this relationship? Her most recent installations have centred on the influence of algorithms on individuals perceptions of reality and the hidden anxieties revealed through our relationships with new technology.

Prior to immigrating to Canada, Lee had exhibited her work extensively in her home country. Since moving to North America, she has exhibited and performed at Fonderie Darling in Montreal as well as at Studio XX, as part of the HTMLLES festival, Axis Lab in Chicago, and participated in the ISCS conference in Toronto, Ontario. She is currently completing her Masters in Fine Art in Intermedia at Concordia University.

Event

PERFORMANCE

Searching for the PAUSE button? Come “indulge your body, and free your mind” with a self-care performance sponsored by I+CARE! As our performers demonstrate meditative yoga routines, this performance brings together the writings of Ivan Illich from “Shadow Work” and anecdotes for self-care, planned obsolescence and shadow labour. Remember: self-care is a necessity for a lifetimes worth of productivity and fulfillment!

Performers: Ahreum Lee, Emilie Morin, Laure Plan, Alexandra Bischoff

Location: SIGHTINGS Cube
1455 De Maisonneuve Blvd. West, Hall Building
Ground floor

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