IF THERE EVER WAS

– an exhibition of extinct and impossible smells –

installation / perfume art (2008)

DATE: 2008
CONTEXT: Exhibition If There Ever Was
VENUE : Reg Vardy Gallery, Sunderland, U.K.
CURATOR : Robert Blackson
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ABOUT THE EXHIBITION

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Scent is the essence of physical presence and lends proof to our surroundings.  Contrastingly, the fourteen scents commissioned for this exhibition are inspired by absence.  Their forms are drawn from disparate stories throughout history for which few, if any, objects remain.  Our relationship to each of these scents is guided by an accompanying text.  These words are not intended to direct interpretation, but to set a stage for the scent to fill.  To know something by its scent alone, as a pure “olfactory image” is a rare event, and it is with this intention that the exhibition has been arranged as you would a cabinet of intangible curiosities.

MY CONTRIBUTION

What I’ve made for this exhibition was the scent of body odor; the scent of East Germany citizen that got captured his/her own body odor without being aware of it.

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Body odor collection, Stasi Museum, Berlin Germany

Body Odour

On December 28, 1989, a slim young woman named Susanne Böden was handing out leaf lets in East Berlin with her little sister. The leaf lets promoted f ree speech for citizens of the Deutsche Democratic Republic. Shortly after she started handing them out, Susanne was arrested by the Stasi, or East German secret police. She stood trial at Stasi headquarters in East Berlin and was served with a caution. Before being released, the Stasi gave her a square of fabric to wipe against the back of her neck. This fabric was then kept by the Stasi in a sealed jar with her name on it.

A person’s body odour is as distinctive and traceable as a fingerprint. The Stasi tracked the movements of suspected dissenters with trained sniffer dogs. To get the scent of their suspects, the Stasi employed a variety of methods such as breaking into apartments and stealing dirty clothes or sitting suspects in a heated room for questioning. The Stasi would then save a patch of fabric from this chair’s upholstery that had absorbed the suspect’s body odour.

The Berlin Wall f ell within months of Susanne’s trial. During the ensuing celebrations Stasi Headquarters were ransacked. Inside a small room at the headquarters, revellers found hundreds of jars labelled with people’s names and stuffed with bits of fabric.

Scent by Maki Ueda

(text by Robert Blackson, curator)

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DEVELOPMENT

Like I always do I made the extracts from the scratch.

The first experiment:

extracting sweat from my own clothes

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The second experiment:

We smell of what we eat. I’ve used whatever I could find in the kitchen for extraction, and then composed “an body odor” with them.

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More documentations: http://scent-lab.blogspot.com/search/label/%5BIf%20There%20Ever%20Was%5D

BOOK ARCHIVE

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This is the catalogue of the exhibition If there ever was - an exhibition of extinct and impossible smells – . All the smells exhibited are printed with microencapsulation. It’s the book for scratch & sniff.

If There Ever Was: a book of extinct and impossible smells
ISBN: 978-0-9557478-0-9 (rrp £12.00) * SOLD OUT *
distributed by: Cornerhouse, www.cornerhouse.org
published by: Art Editions North

However the book is sold out, I would like to share with you the text of the whole exhibition as an archive of this legendary event in olfactory art history : “IF THERE EVER WAS – TEXT” 

GEISHA

two parallel olfactory environments inspired by the historical intercourse between Japan and Holland

installation with live performance and intervention (2009)
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This work, consisting of two parallel olfactory environments, takes you on a sensory journey to 17th-century Japan when the Dutch were stationed on the artificial island Deshima off the Japanese coast.  The scents are not trying to tell you the truth – they take you to the world of imagination and fascination.

(1) ROOM OF GEISHA

This is a room with the Japanese smells that the head of the VOC was presumeably smelling in Japan about 400 years ago.

[PLEASE TOUCH!] You are invited to sniff around and survey the room. Step into the role of the geisha or that of the visiting VOC chief. Lie down on the tatami mats, powder your face and sample the odours of old Japan, smells that were so exotic to the first Dutch visitors.

(2) ROOM OF THE HEAD OF THE DUTCH VOC

This is a room with the Dutch smells: coffee, cigarette, and meat.  They were introduced to Japan by the Dutch.

More documentations regarding its development: http://scent-lab.blogspot.com/search/label/%5BGEISHA%5D