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SAŠO SEDLAČEK
AcDcWc
March 2 – 26, 2010
You are cordially invited
to the opening
of the exhibition on Tuesday,
March 2 at 8 pm at Galerija Škuc.
Guided tour
of the exhibition by the artist
Sašo Sedlaček will take place on
Thursday,
11 March at 6 pm.
To the scope of projects
dealing with alternative uses and abuses
of waste, Sašo Sedlaček adds a new
exhibition project entitled AcDcWc,
which thoroughly and wittily examines
the recycling of excrement. In addition,
in this exhibition the artist reveals
another level of social issues by
clearly touching upon the area of
energy. This is sure to be one of the
main global policy issues, as reserves
of fossil fuels are limited, while the
need for energy continues to grow on a
daily basis. Due to the intensive
consumption of fossil energy resources
and the political carving up of
available energy assets, the use of
alternative sources of energy (solar and
wind energy, waves, fusion reactors)
will become increasingly important.
However, thanks to exclusive energy
lobbies, these have not been developed
to the point where they could compete
with other energy resources. Indirectly,
this is the theme of AcDcWC,
which seeks to address the individual
outside global political systems and
point to one of the possible alternative
ways of recovering energy, which could
substitute for disappearing fossil
fuels. In the developed world, a certain
standard of hygiene is self-evident.
However, at the centre of local
cleanliness, there is a black hole,
which, according to Slavoj Žižek, sucks
into the drainage of our toilet bowl all
of our unconscious, all our shit,
everything we do not want anything to do
with, and carries it away as far as
possible. We are faced with a fact that
forces us to adapt our basic standards
of hygiene, which should grow beyond
local cleanliness and become wider or
global. For this to happen, we must
confront our unconscious, our garbage,
our waste, our excrement.
The exhibition in Škuc
Gallery will present different
prototypes of toilets which generate
energy by recycling excrement. The
different types of toilets will be
positions in different social
situations, which will reveal the
artist's all-encompassing approach to
researching individual segments of
recycling and technological development.
At the exhibition, spectators will be
able to see the contemporary mobile
AcDcWc, which can be used at home,
or while camping as a chemical toilet,
and which uses the energy it generates
to supply various devices (such as
lights and TV-sets). A variant of the
mobile chemical toilet is the AcDcWc
potty, which is smaller, and
consequently produces less energy, but
is still enough to supply smaller
electronic devices, such as mobile
phones and electronic toys, thereby
reducing the toll on the household
energy network. In addition to more
intimate models of AcDcWc toilets, the
exhibition showcases a prototype of a
public mobile AcDcWc, which can be used
in public places with a greater flow of
people, generates greater quantifiers of
energy, and supplies large electricity
consumers (public/street lightning,
public events such as concerts and
meetings). The design of individual
types of AcDcWc toilet is based on
Indian technology called Deenbandhu,
meaning “helpful for the poor”, which
was developed recently by Indian
technologists for the poorer classes of
Indian society, who can thereby produce
electricity and gas for cooking.
Sedlaček’s upgraded version of this
technology was mostly driven by the need
to adapt and use it in the so-called
developed world, and it resulted in the
types of toilets described above.
Analysing political,
economic and social issues and
channelling them though art is a common
practice in contemporary visual art.
Most often such practices flirt with
activism and such art can soon become a
tool to express an anti-idea. Due to the
process of art works becoming activism,
art can often lose its primary function
of manifesting an idea or an aesthetic
moment. However, in the context of the
art of Sašo Sedlaček, who has questioned
the evolutionary moments of contemporary
society for years, this is certainly not
the case. An integrated and consistent
approach to social issues, and direct
application to a selected form of art,
results in great consistency in the
artist’s work at all levels – in terms
of content and form and their combined
effect. In the context of the AcDcWc
exhibition, the latter does occur, as in
addition to being useful, the toilets
incorporate a symbolic gesture which
always testifies to our ignorant
attitude to the sewage and waste which
we produce every day and,
uncontrollably, leave behind.
Production:
Aksioma - Zavod za
sodobne umetnosti, Ljubljana, 2010
Co-production:
Galerija Simulaker,
MMC Pina, Koper
Thanks:
Ib- Procadd
d.o.o., Pavle Sedlaček
Sponsors:
Vigrad d.o.o.,
Sipronika d.o.o., Droga Kolinska

The
programme of Škuc Gallery is supported
by Ministry of
Culture of the Republic of Slovenia
and
Cultural Department of the City of
Ljubljana.
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