Empire

Paul Pfeiffer

Salt Beyoğlu
September 10 – December 10, 2011
© Paul Pfeiffer. Courtesy Paula Cooper Gallery, New York

2004, SINGLE CHANNEL VIDEO, [TECH SPECS]
DURATION: 3 MONTHS, BEGINNING SEPTEMBER 10



The inauguration of the wasp nest is initiated by the queen. Her raw material is wood fiber mixed with saliva; forming a paper paste, she molds a stalk and attaches it to the cool, sheltered eave of a house. She builds up the initial composition of cells, lays her first eggs, and goes back to work on the structure. When the nest has reached the size of a walnut, the workers begin to hatch and immediately join the construction project. When the queen has spawned a sufficient labor force, she retires to devote herself to full-time reproduction. From location selection to exhaustion of resources, the lifecycle of this insect architecture is approximately three months.

This is also the duration of Empire, a video installation by Paul Pfeiffer. Recorded directly to hard drive, projected in uninterrupted real time, and situated in direct contact with the host infrastructure, Empire mediates two modes of civilization: insect and human, organic and technological, material and digital. The title of Pfeiffer’s work gestures to another Empire, Andy Warhol’s famous 8-hour film of the Empire State Building. “In the same way that Warhol's image of the Empire State Building gives the viewer a striking object through which to contemplate things that are really immaterial like human aspiration, ambition, or the passage of time,” explains the artist, “so the wasp nest provides a visual hook to draw the viewer into contemplation of insect behavior, an invitation to project an anthropomorphic narrative onto the nest-building activity of wasps. In a way the nest is a ruse for a study of the perceptual behavior of the viewer.”

Serving as the temporal foundation and conceptual mascot of How We Move, a program of moving image works reflecting on the idea of institutions, Empire has been specially reconfigured for its installation in the Forum of SALT Beyoğlu.
Features Kraliçe Open typeface designed by Project Projects.
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