Events
Jonathan Maus – Mannequin (2021)

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Videoinstallation im Schaufenster
Fortlaufende Projektion: 07.10 – 31.10.2021
Ort: Casino Display | 1, rue de la Loge (draußen) | Das Schaufenster ist von der Rue Large aus sichtbar
Eröffnung: 07.10.2021 > 18:00 – 21:00
Dj set : elster, https://soundcloud.com/leo-scheidt-136605454 > 19:00 – 21:00
Nach einer Sommerpause startet das künstlerische Programm des Casino Display erneut im Oktober mit Mannequin (2021), einer Schaufensterinstallation des deutschen Künstlers Jonathan Maus. Die Videoinstallation wurde als Teil eines Bewerbungsaufrufs von display.ed, einer ausschließlich kreativen Berufen gewidmeten Plattform für Dialog, Begegnung und Austausch, zurückbehalten. Die Installation wird Tag und Nacht im Schaufenster des Casino Display zu sehen sein. Das Schaufenster ist von der Rue Large aus sichtbar.
Plakate im Stadtzentrum sowie Hinweise am Haupteingang des Casino Display dienen als Wegweiser.
Die Videoinstallation Mannequin zeigt zwei Männer, die ihre Körperbehaarung in Form von Frauenkleidungsstücken rasieren. Das Video lehnt sich in seiner Ästhetik an Werbevideos an. Wie eine Schaufensterpuppe wird das Video in einer Vitrine präsentiert. Nichts deutet daraufhin, dass es sich hier um ein Kunstprojekt handelt. Während die Installation zu einem Blick in das Innere einlädt und wundern lässt, weist die Inszenierung der Pop-up Fassade ein körperliches und gedankliches Eindringen ab.
Jonathan Maus (geb. 1993) ist ein nicht-binärer, in Saarbrücken lebender Künstler, der konzeptionell mit den Wechselwirkungen von Räumen und Körpern arbeitet. Der Fokus liegt dabei auf einem niedrigschwelligen und wahrnehmungsbasierten Ansatz, der individuelle Erfahrungen und offene Diskurse zusammenbringt. Seine Interessensgebiete sind Gender Studies, Sprachphilosophie und Anthropologie.
Für seine Studien erhielt Maus ein Cusanuswerk-Stipendium. Den Bachelor in Freie Kunst bei Eric Lanz mit Schwerpunkt Videoinstallation schloss er im Juli 2021 an der Hochschule der Bildenden Künste Saar (HBKsaar) ab. Seit April 2021 vertritt er in der Kunstkommission Saarbrücken den Neuen Saarbrücker Kunstverein.
MANNEQUIN by Jonathan Maus
The installation as a whole leads the viewer to associate the setting with the clothing and beauty industry, but does not display a product, nor is there a concrete object in the video that gets advertised. Through the short, direct and eye-catching approach the video can be roughly understood by walking slowly past it, while a more patient bystander can easily enjoy it multiple times and explore all the little details. This setting makes it possible to approach the work from a standpoint outside of art, which lowers accessibility barriers, while simultaneously raising several questions through its incongruity. A sort of intimacy and relationship is built through the massive use of eye contact and lascivious posing in the video, intriguing the viewer to investigate further. The clear visual language and the then following subverting of expectations leads the viewer to a confrontation with their own biases and gender roles. By applying standardized tropes and subverting them into a new meaning, only a subtle notion to the larger subtext is given. This leaves the viewer mostly alone to bring the pieces together and to figure it out on their own terms, leading everyone to a subjective interpretation.
The idea behind this project is to show the processes of sexualization, objectification and imposing gender roles in only one process and approach it from a consumerist standpoint. As the manly body hair is shaved and formed into womanly clothing, the limit of a fixed gender gets blurred. The two performers stay true to their initial poses, but something has changed that cannot be reversed. A line has been crossed that turned out to be non-existent in the first place.
Throughout this journey the two performers individualize themselves and objectify their body by making it a living sculpture. This self-objectification is a celebration of independence from the gender roles that subverts the working body into an alterable and accordingly enjoyable body.
Meanwhile the imposed challenge between the two („Who is better looking? Who goes further?“) ultimately unites them in a ritual that subverts their sexualization into a shared intimacy of their own astereotypical body. The sexual tension between the two and between them and the viewer finds a relief in the shared experience of exploring their body in a new way and invites the engaging viewer to do the same. Instead of selling their bodies to please the viewer, they enjoy and keep it to themselves, making the experience itself the product that is sold while it is consumed. This, as well as the prominent title, also brings to focus the concept of some contemporary art pieces that act as a showroom for ideas that can be just as easily consumed as any other product. Finally, the deceit of the storefront ties in with the deceit of the studio in the video in a way that intends to make the viewer think about what they actually see and what is not accessible to them.


