The Miseries & Vengeance Wallpapers

2013-14

 

What is the capacity of aesthetics to convey atrocity? In The Miseries & Vengeance Wallpapers, what initially appear to be decorative walls are ultimately revealed to be a provocative dialogue between two sets of images. The exquisitely horrific imagery was culled from a set of historic prints from the Albright-Knox Art Gallery’s collection. In the seventeenth century, Jacques Callot produced the epic suite of etchings “The Miseries and Misfortunes of War” that documented the Thirty Years’ War. An early recorder of the atrocities of war and social injustice, Callot influenced the likes of Francisco de Goya, a fellow observer of human folly and cruelty. The Miseries & Vengeance Wallpapers improvises on the thematic rubrics established by Callot for his suite of etchings. On the Miseries wallpaper, agonized bodies have been extracted from Callot’s prints and assembled to form a disturbingly decorative pattern. On the Vengeance wallpaper, the landscapes from Callot’s etchings have been entirely emptied of bodies and presented as vacated/evacuated terrain, leaving only land and built structures like buildings and torture devices. Callot’s scenes can be grouped into two categories, namely “Miseries and Misfortunes,” which details the perpetration of the atrocities, and “Vengeance or Justice?” which strikes the simultaneously zealous and ambivalent tone of retribution where the line between perpetration and vengeance is often blurred. Key elements extracted from the original prints are repurposed on the wallpapers; these act not only as indicators of Callot’s vision but also serve as links to contemporary territories of conflict that rage on, four centuries later.

 

The first incarnation of this work, titled Miseries & Vengeance, was exhibited at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in 2011 as part of the exhibition “Surveyor.” This first installation consisted of imagery drawn and printed directly on the walls of two adjoining rooms. The Miseries & Vengeance Wallpapers reproduces the imagery from Miseries & Vengeance to original scale as wallpaper.

 

 


 

 


media: vinyl wallpaper

dimensions: installation variable

photos: Biff Henrich/IMG_INK, Millie Chen

Collection of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. The Miseries & Vengeance Wallpapers was first shown in a solo exhibition, curated by Laura Brill, at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY.