JOACHIM KOESTER

EPISODE 3: To navigate, in a genuine way, in the unknown necessitates an attitude of daring, but not one of recklessness (movements generated from the Magical Passes of Carlos Castaneda) - 16mm film on DVD, 2009. For the new piece 'To navigate, in a genuine way, in the unknown necessitates an attitude of daring, but not one of recklessness (movements generated from the Magical Passes of Carlos Castaneda)', Koester generated some routines with a mime player built on Castanedas’ so-called magical passes and tensegrity system.

One way of explaining Koester’s interest in Castanedas' movements is through the metaphoric connotations of photography. Photography has historically been seen as a medium that bridges the world of materiality and the so-called invisible realms. In Koester’s own practice he has been greatly inspired by this concept, except that in his photographic works the invisible realms do not refer to occult lore, but rather to a world of ideas. A connection could be drawn between the photographic as a portal to another realm, and certain types of bodily movements and this is what particularly interests Koester in the Castaneda system. Especially the idea of generating routines is important. One could say that all movement and movement systems are routines with different intentions.

In addition, also Koester’s fascination for the role of the charlatan has found its way to this new film. The figure of the charlatan, which has a long life within the arts but also within shamanism, is well represented by Castanedas being one of the biggest: everything he ever claimed had happened was made up.

'To navigate, in a genuine way, in the unknown necessitates an attitude of daring, but not one of recklessness (movements generated from the Magical Passes of Carlos Castaneda)', Joachim Koester, 16mm film, 2009
EPISODE 2: Figures Of Different Characters - 16mm film on DVD, 2008.
Thinking about the unconscious gesture, Joachim Koester is exploring in a new series of works the terra incognita of the body and mind. More information will follow soon.

EPISODE 1: Tarantism - 16mm film, 2007, Morning of the Magicians - photographs, 2006, Numerous Incidents with Indefinite Outcome - photographs, 2007. [Courtesy of Galerie Jan Mot, Brussels and Galerie Nicolai Wallner, Copenhagen.] Thinking about the unconscious gesture, Joachim Koester explores the terra incognita of the body and mind 'released' momentarily from all control and conforming mannerisms in his film 'Tarantism'. 'Tarantism' is a particular condition (observed in southern Italy) which results from a bite of the wolf spider, known as the tarantula. The bite causes numerous symptoms in the victims: nausea, difficulties in speech, delirium, heightened excitability and restlessness. The bodies of the bitten are seized by convulsions that previously could only be cured by a sort of frenzied dancing. Joachim Koester's interest in Tarantism is tied to its original promise: a dance of uncontrolled and compulsive movements, spasms and convulsions. In the film he has utilized this idea to generate the movements of the dancers. In six individually choreographed parts the dancers attempt to explore this grey zone: the fringes of the body or what might be called the body's 'terra incognita'.

Koester links this piece with a review of his series 'Morning of the Magicians' which testifies of the fact that the history of the occult is also a history of the obscure. The historical figures of this ‘occult’ are not easy to trace. Real identities are typically veiled by disguises and pseudonyms making the artist doubt if these people ever actually existed. One of those figures, the British Aleister Crowley who arrived at Cefalù, Sicily, in 1920 with a group of devotees and moved into a small house which he renamed 'The Abbey of Thelema', inspired by the French writer Rabelais (ca. 1494-1553), who in the concluding chapters of his book 'Gargantua' (1534), describes an ideal community named 'Thélème', which had the governing maxim ‘Do what you will’.

Though hedonistic, centered around Crowley’s own version of magic – a mixture of Kabbalah and yoga, tantric practices, hetero- and homosexual rituals, and the use of drugs-life in the Abbey was often described as bleak and came to an end on April 22, 1923. The Italian authorities carefully covered the frescos, the magic circle on the floor and other traces of the previous activities with a coat of whitewash. The house and garden of the Abbey are now completely overgrown in a strangely evocative way. As Koester walked the faintly visible path to what was once the main entrance, it seemed to him as if sediments, pieces of leftover narratives and ideas from the individuals that once passed through this place had formed knots, as tangled as the bushes and trees that where now taking over, creating a kind of sleeping presence.

EDITION III - MASQUERADE
Joachim KoesterProjects TrajectoryClick here for a complete overview of (episodes of) Joachim Koester's projects, as yet presented in Edition III - Masquerade.

'Tarantism', Joachim Koester, 16 mm black and white film installation (6.31 min) - Episode 1, de Appel arts centre, 2008
'Tonight' with Joachim Koester, 28 September 2008, Frascati, Amsterdam