Introduction
A year represents the Earth’s journey around the sun, a month is the cycle of the moon, and a day is the result of Earth’s rotational cycle. In contrast, the week is a measure of time created without any connection to astronomy. It is an artificial system made only for the sake of the human life cycle. For each day of the week, the artist Camille Henrot examines the forms of human behavior that have been standardized and repeated within society, using the areas of cultural anthropology, religion, social media, and psychoanalytic theory as her references. This exhibition focuses on artworks associated with “Saturday” and “Tuesday,” which are presented alongside the artist’s series of watercolor drawings.
Filmed in New York, Washington, DC, Tahiti, and Tonga, her video Saturday (2017) focuses on the Seventh Day Adventist Church. She was drawn to the Church because its followers observe the Sabbath and conduct baptisms on Saturdays, and because its teachings emphasize the importance of good health and eating habits. For this work, the artist filmed Seventh Day Adventists’ services and recordings of their television prayer program. She combined this footage with scenes of neurological testing, a food commercial, a Botox injection, high-wave surfing, an endoscopy, and political demonstrations. This amalgam of imagery highlights connections between different human strategies to maintain hope in medical, religious and political dimensions.
The word “Tuesday” has its origins in Tyr, the Norse god of war and victory. Tuesday (2017) is a body of work combining video and sculpture that refers to both ancient mythology and the phenomenon of contemporary motivational messaging, as seen through the hashtag “#transformationtuesday”, for example. The film interweaves images of racehorses running, breathing, and having their hair groomed with others showing jiu jitsu practitioners in slow motion as they train on mats before a match. Tuesday subverts competition and replaces it with passive contemplation and an exaggerated suspension of movement and action. Installed along with the video are two sculptures that represent the body in an entangled form. They blur the lines between the acts of surrender and control.