![]() Through the notion of the queue Ondák could be said to explore simultaneously the fluctuation between personal time (‘real’ time) and social time (time spent in the queue), past (memories of queuing) and present (actual queuing) and lived experience (being in the queue) and imagined experience (imagining the effects of queuing).įurther reading Max Andrews, ‘Why Are We Waiting?’, TATE ETC., no.5, Autumn 2005,, accessed 17 March 2009. (Ondák in conversation with the author, 16 October 2004.) Also, on your own you think about your time – what I call ‘real time’ – which has its own value but when you go in the queue, you slow down and the time is different. There is no description of the queue – it is about feelings, about desire and your decision to be in it, and I like this ambiguity of the queue in our society. I became interested in the phenomenon of the queue because it is very unstable, but on the other hand it shows a very strong sense of participation … even if you are not queuing, you are participating as you are facing your memories of queues in the past. Re-enacted in Tate Modern, the queue may be understood as drawing attention to the various functions of the institution, or simply giving the artist the platform from which to explore certain larger issues related to queuing that interest him. Inspired by the artist’s own memories of the long lines formed outside grocery shops in his native Slovakia in the communist era (Ondák quoted in Andrews), the work probably took on a different meaning at the Frieze Art Fair, where the London location and the busy atmosphere may have evoked more the quintessentially British habit of queuing and the daily suffering of the city’s commuters due to long waits (Anna Colin, Do Not Interrupt Your Activities, exhibition catalogue, Royal College of Art, London 2005, p.69). Thus, the work can acquire different connotations depending on the space and time of its enactment. Queuing, although a common social activity, is also historically, culturally and, ultimately, behaviourally-contingent. The queue was afterwards re-enacted at the 2004 Frieze Art Fair in London, where it was purchased by Tate. Good Feelings in Good Times was first presented outside the Kölnischer Kunstverein in Cologne, Germany in 2003. The forty-minute performances may be repeated several times during the day, with twenty-minute breaks in between sessions for the participants to rest, unseen by the general public. Typically, within a forty-minute period of performing, the queue will form, dissolve and form again a few times, with the participants behaving inconspicuously and as naturally as possible. The queue is re-enacted repeatedly during the day according to a schedule agreed between the artist and the museum, at set times and spots around the building. If questioned by onlookers, they are not allowed to divulge anything about the performance they are instead encouraged to improvise as if they were in a real-life situation. ![]() They are not required to wear special clothes, but are asked to dress to suit the situation, to hold personal props and look like ordinary people queuing as if waiting for something to happen. Participants of Good Feelings in Good Times are either volunteers or actors hired by the museum and there is no restriction as to their age or gender. It can be re-enacted either indoors with a minimum of seven and a maximum of twelve people, or outdoors with a maximum of fifteen people. ![]() It is formed in front of a spot where it would make sense for a queue to form, or, for an enhancement of its effects, in front of slightly unexpected but not totally irrelevant spots. The queue is always part of an exhibition and is created in or around an exhibition space. It is intended to be performed inside the museum, but can also be adapted to other spaces. Good Feelings in Good Times is an artificially created queue.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |