
Stefan Saffer has created a new installation for his second show at
the gallery. Purple carpet transforms the space, creating a backdrop
for a group of new sculptures. These are models made in raw, painted
wood. They have a formal construction and sometimes include found
materials, at the same time alluding to something large scale or
functional.
The installation takes it´s form from Epic Theatre, a movement
arising in the early to mid 20th century and inextricably linked to
the German playwright Bertolt Brecht. It assumes that the purpose of
a play, more than to entertain or to imitate reality, is to present
ideas and invite the audience to make judgments on them. Characters
are not intended to mimic real people, but to represent opposing
sides of an argument, archetypes, or stereotypes. The audience should
always be aware that it is watching a play, and should keep an
emotional distance from the action. Brecht described this ideal as
the Verfremdungseffekt, translated as "alienation effect". "It is
most important that one of the main features of the ordinary theatre
should be excluded from the engendering of illusion". Common
production techniques in epic theatre include simplified, non-
realistic set designs and announcements or visual captions that
interrupt and summarize the action. Brecht used comedy to distance
his audiences from emotional or serious events and was heavily
influenced by musicals and fairground performers, including music and
song in his plays.
This collection of objects negotiates the space like characters on
stage, each with it´s own narrative, taking a certain position
within the group. On closer inspection the works reveal themselves as
handmade in construction, their improvised nature allowing a
discourse to take place.
Alienation (2008)
Exhibition Kate MacGarry Gallery, London
April 10 - May 18, 2008