BY Linda Taylor in Reviews | 25 SEP 15
Featured in
Issue 174

Reto Pulfer

Spike Island, Bristol, UK

L
BY Linda Taylor in Reviews | 25 SEP 15

Reto Pulfer, MMMS Reticulum Gewässerzeiten, 2015, exhibition view

On an unusually hot British summer evening, Reto Pulfer’s installation MMMS Reticulum Gewässerzeiten (2015) appeared like a desert mirage in the intense white light of the central gallery at Spike Island. (An unwieldy if descriptive title, MMMS stands for maps, mnemonics, methods and spiele – games in German; reticulum is Latin for net; Gewässerzeiten roughly translates as ‘water times’.) Tremulous ribbons of golden yellows and aquatic blues hung from a large, partially constructed nautical net hoisted overhead. Below, a bell, a cotton tent, a food tin and canister, a sail-like shelter stitched from bed sheets and an arrangement of painted wooden string instruments resembled both a Bedouin camp and an improvised childhood den. The net is an orderly grid indicating safety but also invoking the depths and caprices of the ocean. The scene is set for a story or, rather, myriad possible stories – of adventure, peril and survival in distant lands and treacherous seas – but told and imagined from the comfort and sanctuary of under the blankets.

This amalgamation of the familiar and the fantastical continued in an adjacent corridor with Pulfer’s ‘Maps’ series (2009–15). The large watercolours are approximations of places Pulfer has lived, visited or imagined – from his birthplace of Bern to Ancient Abydos. The artist’s two-part performance on opening night had a similar air – casting the artist as a wandering minstrel bringing tales of the long ago, far away or yet-to-be. (A verse from a Gilbert and Sullivan opera came to mind: ‘A wand’ring minstrel I; A thing of shreds and patches; Of ballads songs and snatches; And dreamy lullaby!’) The final stages of a live raku firing taking place on the pavement outside the gallery were introduced by the sound of Pulfer’s electric guitar – rather than the lute or lyre of his medieval counterpart. Layering looping chords with the closed-eyed, earnest concentration of a wannabe rock star, the artist produced waves of sound that continued to reverberate as he ceremoniously lifted each ceramic from the kiln to cool in sawdust.

Raku ware, whose name derives from the Japanese family that have been making it since the late 1500s, is particularly prized for use in the traditional, ritualistic Japanese tea ceremony. The technique, honed over centuries, nevertheless continues to give rise to an infinite array of unpredictable results. This has a particular resonance in terms of Pulfer’s work, where a convergence of system and chance, stability and mutability, is reflected in the show’s title: Gewässerzeiten is a neologism that combines the German words for ‘water’ and ‘tides’ – one fluid and unstable, the other predictable and regular. Pulfer’s use of systems is revealed in Methoden und Spieletisch (Methods and Games Table, 1988–2015), which comprises 44 works laid out and minutely labelled like museum exhibits. The works include combinatorial games and charts, and maquettes of improbable sculptures that the artist made as a child. Methoden und Spieletisch acts as a kind of reference grid and creation myth for Pulfer and his work.

A guitar interlude also introduced the second part of the performance in the central gallery. (My rock star allusion holds – at one point, Pulfer played the guitar behind his head, Hendrix-style.) The artist enacted an indecipherable but peculiarly compelling ritual, tying the freshly cooled ceramics to other elements of the MMMS Reticulum Gewässerzeiten installation with shoelaces. He leapt, crept and crawled between objects, as though re-enacting a private, silent story. It made me think of the Classical mnemonic technique by which lengthy orations were memorized by visualizing a path through an imagined familiar space (sometimes known as a ‘memory palace’). Continuing the performance, Pulfer used handfuls of silt from the local river (which had been incongruously standing by, topped with nettles, in a wheelbarrow) to daub the words Pass auf Gina (Watch out Gina) and verfolgt (hunted or pursued) – fragments of latent narratives – on the gallery floor. Pulfer signalled the end of the performance with a jubilant vocal trill and sounded the bell before leaving the building. I like to think of him riding off into the sunset on his trusty steed, but perhaps I’m overly affected by quixotic tales.

Linda Taylor is an artist and writer based in the UK. She won the Frieze Writer's Prize in 2014.

SHARE THIS