Tag: ruptures

Georgia O’Keeffe (American, 1887-1986) – Black patio doorsmall, oil on canvas, 58.40 x 35.60 cm (1955)

Doris Salcedo, Shibboleth, 2007-08, installation, Tate Modern
“Salcedo has offered few explanations beyond stating how the fissure represents the immigrant experience in Europe. Though this theme is apparent in the work, it is by no means the only issue raised. As photographs of the installation demonstrate, visitors contorted their bodies in infinite ways as they tried to see below the crack. In Shibboleth, Salcedo elaborates a complex socio-political topic in a work with a tremendous formal presence.
Coded identification
Salcedo’s installation requires attentive viewing. The rupture measures 548 feet in length but its width and depth vary (changing from a slight opening to one several inches wide and up to two feet in depth). The viewer’s perception into the crevice alters, as he or she walks and shifts to better glimpse inside the cracks and appreciate the interior space, notably the wire mesh embedded along the sides.
Change in perspective is one of Salcedo’s goals. She quotes the Frankfurt School theorist Theodor Adorno: “We should all see the world from the perspective of the victim, like Jewish people that were killed with their head down in the Middle Ages. So he wonders, what is the perspective of a person that is agonizing in this position?”

“Shibboleth” by Doris Salcedo, at the Tate Modern in London, consists of a possibly treacherous crack in the gallery floor.

Lucio Fontana, Spatial Concept, 1959, polymer paint on slashed burlap

Lucio Fontana, Cut for Dress 1956-57 © Fondazione Lucio Fontana, Milan, 2007






