27 Feb 2013
20 May 2013

JOACHIM KOESTER: REPTILE BRAIN OR REPTILE BODY, IT'S YOUR ANIMAL

PALAIS DE TOKYO, PARIS

Working in the murky zone between conscious and unconscious, dream and reality, the artist Joachim Koester explores vast fields of knowledge, ranging from Haitian ritual to esoteric séances, and including yoga, Peyote and other hallucinatory experiences. As a result, he creates works that blur the line separating the documentary and the fictional, asking the audience to reconstitute mental journeys on which they undoubtedly would never embarked. This exhibition at the Palais de Tokyo allows the visitor to discover films evoking John Murray Spears’ esoteric séances or Jerzy Grotowski’s research on the superior consciousness of the actor and the “reptilian brain.” 

 

IN THE DEPTHS OF CONSCIOUSNESS

For the past ten years, Joachim Koester (b. 1963, lives and works in Copenhagen and New York) has explored, in his work, certain alternatives to rational consciousness. In his research, he calls attention to exceptional individuals who have developed corporal experimentation as the means of accessing knowledge. His exhibition at the Palais de Tokyo, consisting mostly of new works, is divided into two “physical” zones. In the zone related to the body, the artist revisits experiences of deepened states of consciousness, accessed through physical movement.


FROM HAITAN RITUALS TO ESOTERIC SÉANCES

In two films, he evokes Jerzy Grotowski (1933-1999), a Polish writer and theater director who attempted to rediscover the actor’s heightened awareness through exercises in flexing the spinal cord, inspired by Haitian rituals and by yoga. Grotowski was referring to Paul D. MacLean’s definition of the “reptilian brain”, a sedimentary, almost unconscious layer of the human brain, responsible for bodily movements and basic needs. Another film uses John Murray Spear’s esoteric séances as a starting point. This 20th-century American activist and spiritualist attempted to access the designs for a sewing machine prototype through a choreography created in a state of trance. 

 

AN EXHIBITION WITH AN EXTENSION

For the “cerebral” part of the exhibition, the artist invited two art historians, curators and researchers, Lars Bang Larsen and Yann Chateigné Tytelman, to conceive an extension of the exhibition. In it, they present a group of archival documents borrowed from their research on the “nervous system,” exploring possible relationships between art, science, and the counter-culture.

Joachim Koester suggests that we (re)discover a constellation of figures and ideas, as he outlines a reflection on the physiological relationships between the body and the spirit, and evokes esotericism, mysticism and conspiracism. Adopting a subjective stance towards the document, he invites the visitor to immerse himself/herself in the interstice between fact and fiction. 

DOCUMENTATIONS
General information

Palais de Tokyo site de création contemporaine
13, avenue du Président Wilson à PARIS 

CONTACT

Constance Gounodconstance@claudinecolin.com