Today forms of labour, currency, commodities and the nature of consumption have been dramatically transformed by technologies that continue to evolve. Multinational information technology and e-commerce firms are amongst the highest valued publicly traded companies. Information that is both abundant and infinitely replicable has become a valuable commodity that defies traditional economic principles whereby value is determined by scarcity. Post-Capital presents works by twenty-one artists that variously explore the aesthetics, paradoxes, absurdities and ethical questions posed by post-industrial and perhaps post-capital economies.
A new sculptural installation by Roger Hiorns in the Great Hall features an iconic aircraft encircled by plastic tubing and a system that manifests both terminal stasis and constant flow.
Works by Cao Fei (in the auditorium -1), Simon Denny, Liz Magic Laser and Cameron Rowland (in the galleries on +1) explore the nature of contemporary labour conditions, referring respectively to the phenomenon of the automated logistics centres and warehouses, the gig economy and biometric time clocks. Elsewhere in the first-floor galleries, LED paintings by Ei Arakawa, video installations by Mohamed Bourouissa and Yuri Pattison, and photographs by Shadi Habib Allah feature so-called ‘mediums of exchange’ from the minting of coins at the Monnaie de Paris to the production of Bitcoin in rural China and the unofficial trade of welfare credit in convenience stores in Miami.
Also on the first floor, other works by the artist collective GCC and Guan Xiao can be seen to respectively address conspicuous consumption or overproduction. Photographs by Josephine Pryde and a specially commissioned mural by Nora Turato consider the evolution of language, communication and selfhood in the smartphone era. Video installations by Martine Syms and Sondra Perry refer to the to the commodification of personal data, raising questions of identity, authenticity and individual sovereignty. Sculptures by Katja Novitskova playfully allude to the emergence of the so-called ‘attention economy’ in an information-saturated world. A painting by Laura Owens and a series of photographs by Nick Relph conflate digital and analogue media. The former referring to ephemeral print and 20th century advertising and the latter referencing urban gentrification it the 21st century.
Works installed in Mudam’s Jardin des Sculptures offer examples of common or collective ownership. Oliver Laric creates copyright-free digital scans of antiquities and other objects from museums all over the world, whilst an installation by Hito Steyerl contrasts the phenomenon of freeports with the ancient notion of common land.
Finally, at an undisclosed location in the museum, the artist Lara Favaretto is hosting a series of ‘clandestine talks’ on the respective topics of ‘surplus’, ‘power’ and ‘hacker’ that will be livestreamed by Mudam and on her website thinking-head.net.
The exhibition includes a new performance and poster campaign for sites across the city of Luxembourg by Nora Turato. Several works are drawn from Mudam’s collection, including GCC’s works, which were donated to Mudam in 2015 and 2020 and are presented at the museum for the first time.