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NICOLAS DE OLIVEIRA
A Book of Burning Matches
Collecting Installation Art Documents
LONDON METROPOLITAN UNIVERSITY
THE SCHOOL OF ART, ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN
NICOLAS DE OLIVEIRA
This document was published by London Metropolitan University as part of the School of Art, Architecture
& Design series: AAD Practice Research Portfolios.
Series Editors: Matthew Barac and Jane Clossick
Editorial Coordination: Beatrice De Carli
Academic Advisors: Wessie Ling and Nicholas Temple
Administration: Hannah Parr
Concept Design: Lisa Wallius
Research Assistant: Hannah Parr
© the author
Suggested citation:
Nicolas De Oliveira, A Book of Burning Matches: Collecting Installation Art Documents, AAD Practice
Research Portfolios (London: London Metropolitan University, 2020).
2
A BOOK OF BURNING MATCHES
Project details
Output author
Nicolas de Oliveira
Collaborators
Nicola Oxley (Exhibition Curator and Publication Author),
David Price (Publication Author), Alejandro Ball (Sound
Design and Engineering), Cristina Ramos Gonzalez &
Wouter van der Hallen (Project Assistants) Franziska
Nikolaus (Photographer and Project Assistant)
Project title
A Book of Burning Matches: Collecting Installation Art
Documents
Output type
T – Other (Curatorial Project)
Location
Berlin, Germany
Dates
14 March – 25 May 2015
Budget
€10,000
Clients
Thomas Olbricht Foundation
Partners
SE8 Gallery, London
Supplementary information submitted via URL:
de Oliveira, N., Oxley, N., Price, D., (2015). A Book of Burning Matches: Collecting
Installation Art Documents. Berlin: me Collectors Room Berlin, Olbricht Foundation.
3
NICOLAS DE OLIVEIRA
4
A BOOK OF BURNING MATCHES
Figure 2. A Book of Burning Matches
Exhibition, Me-Collectors Room, Berlin,
2015. Image: Franziska Nicolaus.
5
NICOLAS DE OLIVEIRA
Research content and significance
DESCRIPTION
A Book of Burning Matches: Collecting Installation Art Documents is
the result of 30 years of curating and researching Installation art by de
Oliveira and his collaborator Nicola Oxley. The exhibition, held at the
Me Collectors Room in Berlin, comprises documentation of some 200
past installation projects co-curated by de Oliveira. The display takes
the form of maquettes, photographs, videos, texts and books, as well as
fragments of larger works and complete small objects.
RESEARCH QUESTIONS
The project functions as a miniature, compressing several decades of
works and their surrounding questions with a focus on three key areas:
• What impact has Installation art had on art in the 21st Century and
how has this altered our perception of what art is?
• Can we argue for curation as an artform in its own right?
• Do exhibitions reinforce or weaken authorship?
PROCESS
The phases that mark out this exhibition are the Archive, Document, and
Display. The Archive most closely resembles a collection. The Document
represents the great number of archives which are all overlaid to form
the present-moment of this exhibition. The Display is the configuration of
archival components and new works for the occasion of this exhibition.
6
A BOOK OF BURNING MATCHES
DISSEMINATION
De Oliveira’s curatorial practice engages international artists and
audiences. The exhibition in Berlin was attended by some 6,000 visitors
and was further disseminated through a mini symposium, a dedicated
website, and an eponymous publication.
STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE
Central to the significance of the project is the research and production
of a sustained programme of exhibitions over three decades that
contribute to the development of Installation art from a marginal practice
to mainstream recognition as an artform. Moreover, de Oliveira’s
curatorial practice draws on questions that position installation art as a
fluid activity that is inherently ongoing and strongly dependent on the
interaction with a particular space, its broader and most saliently its
audience.
7
NICOLAS DE OLIVEIRA
Introduction
The exhibition A Book of Burning
Matches: Collecting Installation Art
Documents examines the importance of
documentation in Installation Art, a form
that is both temporary and experiential.
It surveys the collection of documents
assembled by London-based curators
Nicolas de Oliveira and Nicola Oxley,
whose gallery spaces and independent
exhibitions in Britain, Europe and the
Americas initiated over 200 installations
spanning three decades.
work in the form of matchbooks whose
covers gave information about Lawler’s
exhibition and the gallery-programme, in
the manner of a private view card. The
work memorialises and documents the
event of the exhibition, but it remains
entirely ephemeral and of little value as
an object. Accordingly, the documents
presented in our exhibition serve as
reminders of works no longer present.
The exhibition also features a number
of newly made interventions by artists
already present in the archive including
David Edward Allen, Hans Op de Beeck,
Stefan Brüggemann, Ben Cain, Tina
Gverović, Barnaby Hosking, and David
Price. The sound design for the exhibition
is coordinated by the American media
curator Alejandro Ball.
The material displayed takes the form
of analogue and digital photographs,
videos, sound-recordings, texts,
proposals, models, and objects. It does
not seek to replace past installations or
to replicate their immersive presence.
Instead, the exhibition restages the
material, proposing a choreographed
movement through the archive.
This approach can be likened to the
presentation of a Wunderkammer, in
which distinct objects, lifted from their
original context, converse with one
another. The objects displayed are
both verifiable documents and triggers
for recollection, inviting the viewer to
remember, digress, and to imagine.
The title of the exhibition was inspired by
Louise Lawler’s exhibition Arrangements
of Pictures (matchbooks) at Metro
Pictures, New York, in 1982. It featured a
8
A BOOK OF BURNING MATCHES
Figures 3 & 4. A Book of Burning Matches
Exhibition Details, Me-Collectors Room,
Berlin, 2015. Images: Franziska Nicolaus.
9
NICOLAS DE OLIVEIRA
Research context
The project is situated in a wider
debate around ephemeral artforms
with an emphasis on Installation art –
its temporary curated experience and
its permanent collection. Indeed, the
project attempts to bring together these
often opposed positions by presenting
a collection in an unorthodox and
immersive manner.
different temporary artists works, while
underscoring the curator’s rise as a
certain kind of author. (Butler, 2011 &
Rattemeyer, 2010)
In A Book of Burning Matches the
curators exert a degree of authorship
over the documentary display in order
to provoke new readings of works
that are materially absent. The curator
becomes a narrator of a story that can
be physically experienced in the actual
exhibition space (driven entirely through
images) and read in the accompanying
book; while this approach discloses a
vast amount of information, the project
challenges viewers/readers to give shape
to their own experience.
There are numerous historical and recent
exhibitions that use the experiential
qualities of Installation. Dorothea
von Hantelmann’s seminal text The
experiential Turn deems that artworks and
exhibitions can function like performative
‘acts’, bestowing transformative qualities
upon them, comparable to J.L.Austin’s
theories of language. (Hantelmann, 2014)
The shaping of experience has become
increasingly central to the artwork’s
conception, and indeed its reception
by an audience. In this way, immersive
artworks and exhibitions create new
realities that are shared by the spectator,
rather than relying on metaphysics.
Moreover, the project underscores the
central aspect of the collection, albeit
one made of documents and fragments,
rather than a large body of discrete
works. The ethos echoes museums made
by artists in particular such as Marcel
Broodthaers’s Musée des Aigles, Claes
Oldenburg’s Mouse Museum, Daniel
Spoerri’s Musée Sentimentale, as well
as seminal exhibitions such as Ingrid
Schaffner’s Deep Storage or Douglas
Blau’s Picture Shows.
Installation art’s influence over curatorial
practice can be seen in exhibitions
as early as the 1960s organised by
celebrated curators such as Harald
Szeemann (When Attitudes become
Form, 1969) or Lucy Lippard (Numbers
Shows 1969-74). These highlight an
enhanced spatial fluidity between
10
A BOOK OF BURNING MATCHES
Figures 5 & 6. Historical Curatorial Practice.
Top: Lucy Lippard, Numbers Shows 2,
1969-74. Bottom: Harold Szeemann, When
Attitudes Become Form Exhibition, 1969.
11
NICOLAS DE OLIVEIRA
Research process
A Book of Burning Matches: Collecting
Installation Art Documents is the result of
a collaboration over some 30 years with
the curator and writer Nicola Oxley. De
Oliveira and Oxley jointly devised Unit 7
Gallery, Museum of Installation, Notice
and SE8 Gallery as exhibition spaces
that focused on close collaborations
with artists in the production and
dissemination of new projects with an
emphasis on Installation art, Sound,
and Performance. This experimental
approach is chronicled and underpinned
by numerous publications on Installation
art and individual artists’ monographs.
absence of labels, hinting at a curatorial
methodology that privileges sensation,
fiction, and engagement over taxonomy
or classification.
The exhibition was preceded by
an interactive website that allowed
readers to scroll over the chapters of a
hypothetical publication, an action that
revealed further comments by other
authors. The website eventually became
the publication bearing the name of the
exhibition. It is a collaboration between
de Oliveira/Oxley and the novelist,
critic and artist David Price. The texts
were written individually by each of the
three authors and then passed on to
be extensively annotated by the others.
The resulting writings are credited to
all three authors whose comments,
ripostes, footnotes and disagreements
seek to unmoor the linear historical
narrative, while extending the argument
exponentially and inviting the reader to
become an explicit interpreter.
A Book of Burning Matches: Collecting
Installation Art Documents highlights the
challenges of collecting a large-scale
temporary artform by bringing together
and restaging a large number of historical
and current documents and exhibition
fragments from the curatorial practice
of de Oliveira/Oxley. This results in an
immersive exhibition which operates
as a choreographed ‘atmosphere’ for
the visitor; thus, each of the over 1,000
elements of the exhibition retains its
singularity and material integrity, whilst
simultaneously being integrated into a
larger audience ‘experience’.
Though Installation art is perceived as
an innovative and challenging practice
or medium, historians and curators have
sought to subsume it into the broader
canon of art. This linear approach is
rejected by de Oliveira/Oxley in favour
of a partial narrative in which the story
meanders and frays. The lack of labels
asks visitors to see rather than to read
Though each item is known and
identified in an archive in London, the
exhibition in Berlin boasts a complete
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A BOOK OF BURNING MATCHES
Figures 7 & 8. Top: Unit 7 Gallery, 1986.
Image: Edward Woodman. Bottom:
Axonometric Drawing. Image: Nicolas de
Oliveira.
Figure 9. Archive detail, Museum of
Installation, 1994. Image: Nicola Oxley.
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NICOLAS DE OLIVEIRA
the display, a direction that is further
underscored by the curators’ production
of a soundtrack – in collaboration with
sound engineer Alejandro Ball - made
from numerous recorded documents
from their exhibition archive; the sound
is played through a number of soundshowers that punctuate the space, thus
localising is audible content and offering
a choreographic sense of movement or
progression through the show.
weekly basis, partially obliterating what
went before.
Perhaps the earliest iteration of the
curation of an archive in exhibitionform was the Archive Show (Museum of
Installation, 1995) in which de Oliveira
invited artists who had produced major
shows over the previous five years at
the institution to revisit their no longer
materially present or intact installations.
The In the Play of Shadow, lectureperformance given at the Naturally
Hypernatural Conference, Karl Franzens
University Graz, Institute for Art History
and School of Visual Arts, New York
(2014), essays the approach to an
open-ended curatorial practice in which
the visitor becomes the focal point
of sensory experience, a tendency
strongly associated with Installation
art. The lecture appeared as a specially
commissioned text in the refereed book,
Naturally Hypernatural: Concepts of
Nature edited by Sabine Flach.
A previous exhibition curated by de
Oliveira that examined methods of
display was entitled Mulberry Tree Press:
Partial Fictions (SE8 Gallery, 2011) and
brought together 40 artists over a period
of three months. The project functioned
as a palimpsest as artists added works
and information to the display on a
14
A BOOK OF BURNING MATCHES
Figure 10. Mulberry Tree Press Exhibition
Part I, SE8 Gallery, Nicolas de Oliveira
Eleanor Vonne Brown, Jeremy Millar, Round
Table, 2010. Image: Christian Hagen
Figure 11. Archival Documents, SE8 Gallery,
2014. Image: Nicola Oxley.
15
NICOLAS DE OLIVEIRA
Figures 12 - 15. Left to Right: Museum
of Installation Archive, Niemis, Haselden,
Kesseler. Images: Edward Woodman.
16
A BOOK OF BURNING MATCHES
Figure 16. Kratochvil Installation from the
archive. Image: Edward Woodman.
17
NICOLAS DE OLIVEIRA
Research insights
The project argues that the understanding
of Installation art as both practice and
medium remains partial. By breaking
down the boundaries between space,
object and experience, this exhibition
made a strong case for the centrality
of the spectator – not simply as a final
recipient of a certain epistemological
truth delivered by the artist or curator,
but as a partner in an activity whose
destination is yet to be determined.
The project embraces the apparent
contradiction between a transitory
artform – which typically relies on a
unique, immersive encounter with a
viewer - and the idea of the collection;
it examines the question of what a
collection in the 21st Century might be,
a period in history when the questions
of origin and originality are brought into
question by the proliferation of the digital
realm. It is not that this project set out to
document every aspect of the creation
of individual installations made by artists
– rendering the map larger than the
territory, or the representation superior
to the real – but rather it argues for the
persistence of these artworks not through
a static memory but through often minor,
fragile documents, recordings and
fragments that ‘keep the pieces in play’
and extend their resonance and actuality
into the present.
emblematic of de Oliveira’s (and Oxley’s)
oeuvre which argues for Installation art
(and indeed curatorial practice) as an
ephemeral artform where the material
presence of a single work ceases at the
end of an exhibition but admits that the
process behind Installation art produces
significant documentation in its many
forms. This material can persist in the
form of a collection or archive long after
the demise of the actual work, extending
the latter’s life and reach towards new
audiences.
The founding of a Museum of Installation
(1990-2003) served as a provocation
to the art establishment, as well as a
serious enquiry into the relationship
between temporary art practices and
remembrance, also underlined in
two major surveys of the practice of
Installation art (1994 and 2003).
Further, de Oliveira’s approach is built
upon the collective ethos of Installation
art; given the scale, complexity and cost
of many of these works they require
artists to work with a larger team, usually
based in larger art institutions who share
the expertise of their staff, the scale of
the premises and so on. Independent
organisations such as those run by de
Oliveira are largely dependent on a core
team of volunteers and competencies
become much less clear-cut. Accordingly,
Accordingly, this project may be seen as
18
A BOOK OF BURNING MATCHES
this project seeks to reflect this
dynamic, and challenges the hierarchy
and division of labour performed by
discrete individuals or contributions
– artists, curators, writers, spectators –
by rendering their boundaries porous,
allowing knowledge to flow in different
directions, tainting the different subject
positions.
Figure 17. A Book of Burning Matches
Exhibition, Me-Collectors Room, Berlin,
2015. Image: Franziska Nicolaus.
19
NICOLAS DE OLIVEIRA
Dissemination
De Oliveira’s curatorial practice is based in London but features a strong showing
of international artists; further, he aims to engage international audiences through
exhibition displays in Europe and beyond. This project was especially commissioned
by the Thomas Olbricht Foundation in Berlin with the aim of presenting a
significant collection of works that chimed with the institution’s wider programme
of contemporary art exhibitions, whilst supplying a contemporary response to its
renowned and permanently installed Wunderkammer – a Cabinet of Curiosities – which
showcases ancient and historical marvels. The output thus plays with the arcane
taxonomy (ie, natural, artificial etc) of the cabinet by devising a series of exhibition
‘zones’ that divide the artifacts into different areas. The visitor navigates the spaces
seeking clues of boundaries, which are subtly inflected through sound, changes in
colours/textures, the use of vitrines and other display supports.
EXHIBITION
According to the Thomas Olbricht Foundation there were 6815 tracked viewers to
the exhibition which was extended by a further week to the 31st May 2015 due to its
success.
A Book of Burning Matches: Collecting Installation Art Documents. (2015) [Exhibition]
me Collectors Room, Berlin. 14 March 2015 - 31 May 2015.
EVENTS PROGRAMME
The Thomas Olbricht foundation organised guided tours of the exhibition, as well as
a series of workshops for primary and secondary school children. Accompanying the
exhibition there was also a mini-symposium moderated by de Oliveira that explored
key themes such as staging, immersion, location and the archive, with presentations
by Professor Dr.Hans Dickel (Institute of Art History, Erlangen, Germany), Dr.Nayia
Yiakoumaki (Head of Archive, Whitechapel Gallery) and David Price (writer and artist).
Curators-Tour. The Thomas Olbricht foundation, Berlin. 21 March 2015.
Expert-Tour / Symposium. The Thomas Olbricht foundation, Berlin. 14 March 2015.
Family Workshops. The Thomas Olbricht foundation, Berlin. 20 January 2015.
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A BOOK OF BURNING MATCHES
BOOK
The exhibition was preceded by a dedicated website and publication. The eponymous
publication – jointly written with Oxley, and the novelist David Price - chronicles
aspects of exhibitions and events curated by de Oliveira, linking them to salient
aspects of Installation art as a practice in general that underwent important alterations
over this period.
de Oliveira, N., Oxley, N., Price, D., (2015). A Book of Burning Matches: Collecting
Installation Art Documents. Berlin: me Collectors Room Berlin, Olbricht Foundation.
SELECTED PRESS
Art in Berlin (2015). A Book of Burning Matches: Collecting Installation Art Documents.
Available at: <https://www.art-in-berlin.de/ausstellungs-text.php?id=11006>
(Accessed: 12.17.20).
Berlin Art Grid (2015). A Book of Burning Matches: Collecting Installation Art
Documents - me Collectors Room / Stiftung Olbricht. Available at: <http://berlinartgrid.
com/exhibitions/a-book-of-burning-matches-collecting-installation-art-documents>
(Accessed: 12.17.20).
Chased Magazine (2015). What´s On in Berlin: Ausstellung “A Book of Burning
Matches”. Available at: <http://www.chasedmagazine.com/2015/01/whats-on-inberlin-ausstellung-a-book-of-burning-matches/> (Accessed: 12.17.20).
Kunstmagazin (2015). Installation art in the me Collectors Room. Available at: <https://
www.kunstleben-berlin.de/installationskunst-im-collectors-room/> (Accessed:
12.17.20).
Pereira, L. (2015). The Book of Burning Matches at ME Collectors Room. Widewalls
Magazine. Available at: <https://www.widewalls.ch/magazine/the-book-of-burningmatches-at-me-collectors-room-berlin-2015> (Accessed: 12.17.20).
Volk, T. (2015). A Book of Burning Matches: Collecting Installation Art Documents. me
Berlin. Available at: <http://www.me-berlin.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/Pressrelease_A-Book-of-Burning-Matches2.pdf> (Accessed: 12.17.20).
Wolff, M. (2015). Collected the past. Manfred Wolff mittendrin. Manfred Wolff
mittendrin. Available at: <https://bunteseite.wordpress.com/2015/03/31/vergangenesgesammelt/> (Accessed: 12.17.20).
21
NICOLAS DE OLIVEIRA
22
A BOOK OF BURNING MATCHES
Figure 18. A Book of Burning Matches
Exhibition, Me-Collectors Room, Berlin,
2015. Image: Franziska Nicolaus.
23
NICOLAS DE OLIVEIRA
Impact
The project was the outcome of three
decades dedicated to the study and
presentation of installation art, and its
impact ought to be seen in the context
of an ongoing curatorial and theoretical
practice by de Oliveira.
Over 6000 people visited the exhibition,
many repeat visits were made as
audiences were fascinated with the
amount of material on exhibition. Some
of this impact has been recounted
first-hand by visitors at the time to the
curators, passed on by gallery staff or
detailed in comment books. Equally
press reviews were very favourable;
event berlin selected it as event of the
week (10/3/15), Vivre Berlin (8/4/15)
calls it ’out of the ordinary, playful and
strange’, while Widewalls Magazine calls
it ‘truly amazing’ and having ‘a very clear
statement and concept that will probably
influence many conceptual artists in the
future’ (19/2/15).
The small teams gathered by de
Oliveira for his collaborative projects
form part of a strategy of training and
empowerment, a process which impacts
the individuals taking part in shaping the
projects, as was the case with A Book of
Burning Matches. Alejandro Ball was an
American/Peruvian graduating student
on the MA Curating the Contemporary
at London Metropolitan University and
was instrumental in co-curating the sonic
design for the exhibition; the experience
led him to undertake a PhD at University
of Dundee and in his development
of AGORAMA, a virtual space for the
development and exhibition of Network
Art projects. Franziska Nicolaus worked
as a curatorial assistant on the project
and graduated in Fine Art from London
Metropolitan University. Working on
the project between London and Berlin
led her to become a producer, events,
and project manager. Cristina Ramos
Gonzalez who worked on project
research with a remit for archival
processes graduated to become a
writer and curator with an emphasis on
interactivity and installation art.
Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo
(founder of Sandretto Re Rebaudengo
Foundation Turin + Madrid) called the
exhibition ‘extraordinary’ – a major
collector of installation art. The founder,
Thomas Olbricht and his director Julia
Rust of the Me-Collector’s Room led
the team to devise a number of talks
and workshops for the exhibition that
highlighted its innovative stance in
regard to a collection, which was also
tested in the foundation’s own cabinet of
curiosities displays.
So, finally, it is the curator/writer, who
is changed by the project. This can be
a more internalised process that feeds
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A BOOK OF BURNING MATCHES
research and practice over time, and it
can also impact a career. As a result of
the exhibition, de Oliveira was appointed
to the international Jury of the Nam June
Paik Prize, and shortlisted for the Busan
Biennale Curator Competition, as well as
invited to present the exhibition You’ve
eaten Roses, now you’ll drink the Moon
at Forum Braga/Leal Rios Foundation,
Portugal – an exhibition based on another
collection that further extended the sonic
and spatial ideas developed for A Book
of Burning Matches. The publication
accompanying the exhibition led directly
to de Oliveira being headhunted by art
agency Montabonel & Partners as a
research director.
25
NICOLAS DE OLIVEIRA
References
Akervall, L., Crone, B., de Oliveira, N., & Ridout, N. (2014). Talk: Virtual Immersion
Panel Discussion. Zabludowicz Collection. Delivered 13 November.
Butler, C. (2011). From Conceptualism to Feminism: Lucy Lippard’s Numbers Shows
1969–74. Germany: Verlag der Buchhandlung Walther Konig.
Copeland, M., Lovay, B. (2017). The Anti-Museum. London: Koenig Books.
de Oliveira, N., Oxley, N., Petry, M. (2004). Installation Art in the New Millennium: The
Empire of the Senses. New York: Thames and Hudson Ltd.
de Oliveira, N., de, Oxley, N. (2016). 'In the Play of Shadow', In: Naturally Hypernatural
I:Concepts of Nature. Switzerland: Peter Lang AG.
Rattemeyer, C. (2010). Exhibiting the New Art: “Op Losse Schroeven” and “When
Attitudes Become Form” 1969. Germany: Buchhandlung Walther Konig GmbH & Co.
Rebentisch, J. (2012). Aesthetics of Installation Art. Berlin: Sternberg Press.
van Winkel, C. (2012). During the Exhibition the Gallery Will Be Closed. Amsterdam:
Valiz.
von Hantelmann, D. (2014). 'The Experiential Turn.' Living Collections Catalogue. 1.
pp. 1-16.
26
A BOOK OF BURNING MATCHES
27
Please choose one colour for your portfolio from
the ones below, and then change the swatch called
“REF Folio OWN COLOUR” accordingly. This will
automatically change the colour of the cover page, as
well as of page numbers and other elements throughout
the portfolio.
255 154 50
125 72 143
216 72 65
0 154 114
0 164 221
251 207 0
0 34 91
151 10 47
134 179 226