Die
Tödliche Doris: Soundless Music
Opening: 27 November 2007, 6-8pm
Lecture with Super-8 films: 28 and 29 November, 7.30pm
Exhibition: 28 November – 9 February 2008
“Die Tödliche Doris is still one of the long runners of
German avant-garde art. If there is a theme in their artistic work
then it is the search for signs of life, coupled with the attempt
to breathe new life into them.” Journal Frankfurt, 1991
This is the first UK exhibition of work by the innovative Berlin art-punk
group Die Tödliche Doris (The Deadly Doris). Founded in 1980
the group created records, tapes, films, performances, and exhibited
their work widely including at documenta 8 in Kassel. Their seven-year
plan saw the group dissolved into a bottle of Italian white wine in
1987, however Doris has had an afterlife through re-workings of documentation
and recordings.
Led by artist Wolfgang Müller, Doris was conceived both as a
conceptual music group and a character resembling a super housewife
philosopher. Dada inspired, her identity constantly evolved, refusing
a singular definition or image; the bands’ logo was a Sparkasse
Bank logo inverted, which made it look like a question mark. Their
work playfully questioned the dominant power of the information system
and its transformation through language, fashion and the media.
This exhibition will re-present their 1981 record “Die Tödliche
Doris” and its re-release fifteen years later, interpreted through
gesture and sign language. The thirteen tracks on the LP each have
a different personality trait expressed through different fashion
designs, including pearl braces, carpet-tile-hair-do, wig bikini and
the woodpecker shoe. The exhibition will show each fashion item and
a video of the sign language interpretation, translating the original
music and lyrics into a form of soundless music. This will be accompanied
by images of the group taken by internationally acclaimed US photographer
Nan Goldin.
The Deadly Doris were central to the new atonal music scene in 1980s
West Berlin, performing at Martin Kippenberger’s infamous music
venue SO 36. In 1981 they performed at the Festival of Ingenious Dilletantes
alongside Einsturzende Neubauten, Nekropolis and Gudrun Gut, an event
considered to have encouraged the birth of techno music. Attempting
to ignore the division between high art and subculture, amateurism
and dilettantism were celebrated as democratic forces against both
the capitalist system and GDR socialism.
A limited edition print and multiple are available for sale to accompany
this exhibition.
Exhibition presented with the kind assistance of Wolfgang Müller,
Martin Schmitz Verlag Berlin, Tøni Schifer, Edition Kröthenhayn
and Forma.
www.die-toedliche-doris.de
www.wolfgangmueller.net
Special Events:
A History of Die Tödliche Doris by Wolfgang Müller
Wednesday 28 November, 7:30pm, Admission Free
Star and Shadow Cinema, Stepney Bank, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 2NP
Thursday 29 November, 7:30pm, £3 / £1.50
The Centre for Contemporary Arts, 350 Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow
A performance lecture with Super-8 films by Wolfgang Müller
founding member of Berlin based conceptual art group Die Tödliche
Doris (The Deadly Doris). The group existed from 1980 – 1987
and produced avant-garde music, film and performance projects including
exhibiting at documenta 8, Kassel. Their radical Dadaist character
embodied the city’s unstable identity and their acclaimed
Super-8 films, including The Life of Sid Vicious and Berliner
Kitchen Music evoke a disappearing era.
www.starandshadow.org.uk
www.cca-glasgow.com/events/wolfgangmuller.html
Supported by alt.vinyl and Arts Council England
Media Sponsor: The Wire magazine
|
Die
Tödliche Doris: Soundless Music - see collection of works >
Lecture and Super-8 Films >
Exhibition poster (pdf) >
Information Sheet (pdf) >
Editions >
|