Overview
Images migrate, often without much luggage. Take this view of a FedEx package, which has travelled far further than the parcel itself – the box never arrived at its destination. The photograph (of another photograph) shows a souvenir model of a Yemeni palace and a computer printer creeping out of the cardboard box, shot like a deer in headlights, cornered and floored. The image becomes the package, delivered to your front door. Or this hole in the ground: if the image were in a Texan newspaper, the hole would tunnel through to another, lawless place.
What is its promise here? In the same week, a similar icon appeared on the cover of a German Donald Duck magazine and in a newspaper photo of a spectacular bank break-in via an excavated tunnel.
Both are distant relatives of a trope found throughout European art history, most often associated with a tale central to the Old Testament and the Qur’an in which Joseph/Yusuf was thrown into a cistern and sold by his brothers to slave dealers, who took him from Palestine to Egypt.
This story was a popular topic in paintings and tapestries of the late seventeenth to early nineteenth centuries, but now subterranean border crossings are found worldwide. Here, descending from a harlequin pattern, the cavity in the floor will lead to another kingdom, if not a promised landscape.
2013
This project was part of Sharjah Biennial 11
Commissioned by Sharjah Art Foundation
Artwork Images
Hole, Landscape, Parcel
Thomas Demand
2011
Colour photograph, UV print on non woven wallpaper
Colour photograph mounted on Diasec
Dimensions variable
Installation view
Commissioned by Sharjah Art Foundation
Photo by Alfredo Rubio
Related
Demand, Thomas
Thomas Demand makes mural-scale photographs, but instead of finding his subject matter in real life, he uses paper and cardboard to reconstruct scenes from images reproduced in various media sources, and then photographs them.
March Meeting 2013: Towards a New Cultural Cartography
This publication takes as its starting point Yuko Hasegawa’s curatorial concept for Sharjah Biennial 11: Re:Emerge – Towards a New Cultural Cartography and March Meeting 2013.