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Pipe Dreams: The Water Hole
© Urszula Dawkins, 2009
The light is clear but uncanny around Steiner and Lenzlinger's The Water
Hole - blue-tinged, like moonlight. The room is filled with a
near-living thicket of PVC piping, mops of dried kelp and coloured
household buckets, artificial flower-parts in strange permutations,
plastic drink bottles, bones, gaudy crystals, and play-school spiders
made of dead mobile phones and fun-fur. Amid the surreal vegetation, old
ceramic handbasins and toilets are poised precariously, in soft-glowing
pastels.
High up and brightly lit is an IV bag, half-empty; a longish tube
dangling down into the sterile black sky of the gallery. It drips slowly
into a mud-caked depression on a quilt-covered bed, into which a few
pipes leading from the installation drain ineffectually. The dried clay
and smooth, slurried pool are golden, like the coverlet. We've made our
environmental bed; now it's time to lie in it.
The water hole signifies the origin of life, according to Swiss artists
Gerda Steiner and Jörg Lenzlinger. In the water hole sits the snake, or
the spirit. You stop at the water hole to drink; you stay there, because
there's water. Animals come to drink at the water hole so it's the
place to hunt - but also the place be hunted. Life and death meet at the
water hole.
In the city, they say, water is transported to our private oases: the
toilet, the sink, the bathtub. Unlike other animals, we soil our
drinking water with our shit. We humans are famous for it. We all pray
for rain.
Steiner and Lenzlinger have worked together for the past ten years on
countless installations in cities around the world, since their first
collaboration as part of Melbourne's one-and-only Biennial, in 1999.
Their previous residencies have included such whimsies as the creation
of a 'moon garden' in a medieval silver mine in the mountains of Alsace
(2007-08); a grotto of 'lost objects' that visitors were invited to take
home with them in exchange for a story, in San Antonio, Texas (2006); a
Brainforest in Kanazawa, Japan (2004); and a mutating, semi-living
Office in Brasilia (2007), to name a few. All their works result from a
deep engagement with place over a period of time: between October and
December 2008 they were resident at Melbourne's Footscray Community Arts
Centre, gathering and building the component parts for an installation
that occupies the whole ACCA gallery space and includes a number of
smaller, subtly related works.
Lurid, ever-growing crystals feature in much of Steiner and Lenzlinger's
work, and are intrinsic to The Water Hole. In hot pink, fiery red,
electric blue, lime and yellow, they dangle like stalactites, branch
like coral, fold like moss over disguised objects, or line the dried-out
pools that lie beneath the climbing assembly of plumbing.
Lenzlinger explains that the crystals are formed by the industrial
fertiliser, urea, and coloured by adding other chemicals. Urea was, he
says, the first organic substance to be manufactured synthetically, and
at the time (around the 1830s) scientists believed it heralded the
creation of artificial life. A symbolic link between the synthetic and
the natural worlds, "urea is in your blood, it's in your sweat, you find
it everywhere, even in cosmetics. It's often used for glue, or even as
an additional food for animals."
Of working with crystals, Lenzlinger says: "I became interested to work
with the force of a substance - a force which is already inside the
substance. I became fascinated with the process of crystallisation - how
can a liquid just turn into a clearly organised structure?"
Steiner explains the link between urea and the recurring themes of
nature and artifice, life and death that are central to the work:
"We can use it as the living matter, as living material which is
independent and can grow chaotically. Urea loves to grow, we always
reuse it, so it always grows better or faster, as if it would have a
memory."
The use of urea also symbolises the conundrum of modern agriculture: "It
needs a lot of fossil energy to produce it?plus the earth gets salted,
because the fertiliser is [used] too much," she says.
The Water Hole also explores the idea of the 'cargo cult' - in which
objects are arranged or rituals enacted in order to attract the 'cargo' -
or in this case, the water. Lenzlinger describes the work as a kind of
suspended vegetation that invites the rain, its pipes and tubes hopeful
of collecting the downpour and channelling it to the half-dry dam.
Materials for The Water Hole were gathered from around Melbourne's inner
west during the residency. "Second-hand material has a history," says
Steiner. "It has its traces and it's inspiring for us to work with it."
The assembled objects will have different meanings for each viewer: the
installation exists, the artists say, simply to "open up the senses". In
the same way that places create impressions that inspire the artists,
they in turn see themselves as creating environments where visitors will
feel their own sense of 'traces', themselves part of an ephemeral
'trail'.
To reach The Water Hole one wanders first through a twisting, rustling
tunnel made of dried branches and reflective survival foil. After
observing the scattered pyramid of discarded items and its forlorn water
hole, the 'trail' leads to a hidden 'observation deck', complete with
binoculars and one-way glass. The visitor is now "dissolved" or
"digested" by the structure. As Steiner puts it in her exhibition note:
"Isolated in the dark you have the overview, a protected and safe
situation where you can gaze at your own species and study their
behaviour in a reversed environment". A water cooler and plentiful
plastic cups in this space further implicate the viewer.
Beyond the observation deck is a large room filled with projected,
kaleidoscopic details from the Jardin de Lune, Steiner and Lenzlinger's
'moon garden' installation of 2007. Lying on a water bed, one is
immersed in a constantly changing wallscape of curling white hoses, pale
crystals and silvered leaves. In a sense, Jardin de Lune was another
'cargo cult': Lenzlinger says it aimed "to grow the silver back" in the
exhausted mine.
"The whole idea came from the time," he says, "when alchemy was
designed, and silver was related to the moon? The silver would [also]
relate to the unconscious, and then you have the fertility as well. The
moon garden is a mixture of an organism inside this stone [of the mine],
also a laboratory to find new materials, and also a garden of dreams."
Three "treatments for balance" form the next step in the ACCA visitor's
journey. For each treatment, the viewer lies on a white, leather 'bed'.
Above one is a perfectly-balanced, slowly turning 'mobile' of dead
branches strung with small objects, once again including plastic flower
parts, urban waste and curious found objects. Over another hangs a 33-kg
meteorite, on loan from Museum Victoria. Lying beneath its melted,
scalloped surface, one can only contemplate its origin and hope it
doesn't break the net in which it's held. The last bed is itself
suspended - there is nothing above it but the cables and their shadows,
moving across the ceiling.
The penultimate room holds a large collection of photos, taken during
the trek across Europe and Asia that first brought Steiner and
Lenzlinger to Melbourne ten years ago, when their collaborative work
began. The pictures are 'snapshots' of people met along the way, and
suggest a cyclic journey that culminates in the current residency.
Finally, almost hidden behind a wall: a miniature desalination plant for
tears. A tiny laboratory flask and tubes, perched on a wire stand, a
tee-light candle underneath, on an old laminex-topped desk. Diagrams on
the wall show an eye, trees; labels for lacrimal glands, Lake Eyre,
mountains, rivers and streams. A small CCTV monitor observes visitors as
they drink their cooled water on the 'observation deck'. Of this final
part of the installation Steiner says: "In the end, no worries, we can
all drink our tears."
The creative process is for Steiner and Lenzlinger both a form of highly
distilled 'play' with objects and ideas, and simply part of "creating a
life" - they have moved almost constantly around the world over the
past decade, producing dozens of major works. At the beginning of March,
The Water Hole will be dismantled completely and returned mostly to
where it came from: second-hand plumbing outlets, recycling facilities,
the earth. When it happens, the artists will be on holiday together -
somewhere in the Australian desert, they think. There is an
almost-Buddhist sense of non-attachment: they celebrate their work's
ephemeral nature as they move to the next place and leave it behind.
"There is a sadness in it but there is also a liberation," says
Lenzlinger, "that this stream of life can go on. I think a lot of humans
tend to attach to something, to an idea or to a material, and to go
through life like this, while they are missing a lot of other things."
Steiner says that when the installation is decommissioned, "we will say
to each other 'oh, today is the day they break it down' and we'll
laugh". She laughs. "You are much more free if you don't have material
around you - it's ideas, dreams, all these things that are un-material,
or just material for a short time; it is all you keep. But material is
like garbage?"
In The Water Hole, nature and refuse share the same aesthetic space,
weaving elements of the suburbs and streets - grass seeds, twigs,
discarded items - into the aspirational, cargo-cult whole that
constitutes life in Melbourne. From the plastic and foam waste to the
living/non-living urea, Steiner and Lenzlinger's work is a journey from
place to place, from one end of ACCA to the other, from one end of the
world to the other. It can't be owned, or kept. In Steiner's words:
"It's like a gift you give away, and you know, you don't want gifts
back.
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