One Star Review: Salted Wounds – An Inquiry into the Ache of Preservation

One Star Review: Salted Wounds – An Inquiry into the Ache of Preservation

“An Exhibition of Badly-Lit Self-Adoration,” by conceptualist Marius Klein-Cho at the Colchester Museum for Experiential De-Obfuscation

It is no small thing to walk into an art show and feel,within seconds,that you have stepped into a crime scene in which the biggest casualty is good taste. Marius Klein-Cho’s Salted Wounds claims to explore “the tension between cure and decay, the ache of preservation, the erotics of crystallization.” What it actually delivers is three rooms’ worth of pretentious garbage sprinkled with enough sodium chloride to trigger a hypertension warning.

Before you even see the work, you’re required to “cleanse your palate” by licking a Himalayan salt block mounted to the wall next to the entry door. The gallery attendant, dressed as a Victorian dockworker, watches to make sure you do it. I considered asking for a fresh block, but given the state of the rest of the show, I suspect hygiene was not part of the conceptual framework.

Room One: The Pickle of Memory

You are greeted by a suspended chandelier made entirely of dill pickles, each one slowly dripping brine into a paddling pool filled with marshmallows. Signs say you can eat the marshmallows; nobody does. A faint audio track plays something I couldn’t hear – the sound may have been seeping in to the room from a different gallery. The nearby information panel claims this piece “dismantles the binary between fresh and preserved selfhood.” Hmmm, does it? And what does that even mean?

Room Two: Tears of the Brackish Moon

This is essentially a dimly lit corridor lined with large salt licks, each carved into crude busts of historical figures. Mine appeared to be a pitted and eroded version of Virginia Woolf. Visitors are encouraged to lick them “to taste the erosion of legacy.” I did not. A man ahead of me licked Napoleon and muttered, “Too much cumin.”

Room Three: Cure Me, Daddy

The “centrepiece” is a raw ham covered in glitter, rotating slowly on a mirrored turntable, surrounded by taxidermied pigeons wearing wedding veils. Every so often, a hidden misting system sprays a fine saltwater fog into the room. This, we are told, represents “the nuptial brine of desire.” I saw three people coughing uncontrollably and one woman collapse to the floor. She was soon moved on by gallery security.

The final “gesture” of the show is Vous êtes the Salt Mine, an “immersive identity excavation” in which you lie on a heated slab while an intern pours table salt onto your chest and whispers compliments sourced from Craigslist personal ads, in French. I lasted 15 seconds before I rolled off the slab and made for the exit.

The gift shop sells £45 jars of “artist-harvested salt”, salted liquorice shaped like crying babies, and a T-shirt that reads “I Am the Brine.” I left without purchasing anything.

One star,because, in fairness, the fog machine worked. Everything else? An over-seasoned monument to the dangers of letting a concept go unchecked. Salted Wounds is less an exhibition than a marathon of conceptual seasoning for an audience that did not consent to be marinated.

The Ergonomics of Screaming: Parquet Fontaine at the Nice Museum

by Anselm Pepto

Parquet Fontaine doesn’t make art so much as threaten it. His latest exhibition, Soft Objects for Hard Feelings, now staged across three non-contiguous rooms at the Nice Museum, is a study in discomfort,both ergonomic and existential. The sheer strangeness begins at the door, where visitors are greeted by a brightly painted intern offering mouth guards.

Fontaine, who rose to cult prominence after being ejected from the 2019 Venice Biennale for attempting to install a functional trampoline beneath the Hungarian Pavilion’s suicide installation, continues his inquiry into the violent intersection of mid-century design, unresolved childhood trauma, and contemporary conditions like gluten intolerance. He insists his practice is rooted in “accidental function”: objects that neither work nor completely fail, but hover in a permanent state of ethical hesitation.

At the heart of the show is Chair #0 (My Mother, My Algorithm), a fully upholstered screaming apparatus shaped like a Modernist chaise lounge with inexplicable antlers. It emits an irregular tone Fontaine calls “emotional tinnitus.” Made from materials including recycled juicing mats and loosely braided horsehair, the piece invites the viewer to recline in theoretical comfort, only to release a pungent waft of despair.

Across the gallery, Email to Dad (Unsent) takes the form of a 14-foot sofa filled with shredded tax forms and mounted on four gently vibrating pedestals. It hums softly in Latvian. Fontaine has said the sculpture “represents the slow buffering of forgiveness,” though I am at a loss at how exactly this is the case.

The walls are dotted with smaller works, including Ergo-Fascism I-IV, a series of IKEA instruction manuals annotated with deeply personal footnotes in crabbed handwriting. These are displayed under cracked sheets of resin labeled with fragments like “don’t sit like that, it’s what made you this way” and “remember: the stool is not your father.”

Curator Minerva Dent calls Fontaine’s work “an urgent response to the over-optimized present.” She gestures toward Standing Desk for the Emotionally Seated, a rotating podium of salt and chalk dust that periodically dispenses espresso beans into a child’s sneaker. “He’s interrogating postures of power,” Dent explains, “and also the legibility of ergonomic failure as an archival impulse.”

Reactions have been predictably divisive. A local paper labeled the show “a cry for help.” Sales in the gift shop have been sluggish, but this was to be expected when the gallery was forced to admit that none of the items are dishwasher-safe. Fontaine, for his part, remains elusive. When approached for comment during the opening, he described his work as “a minor intervention in my own visibility,” which confuses as much as it elucidates.

Still, Soft Objects for Hard Feelings is hard to forget. Whether it is performance, sculpture, or one man’s slow descent into furniture-based madness, Fontaine has built a space where the unsit-able becomes the unforgettable.

A Mesmerizing Exploration of Art and Motion: Spick Jarre’s New Exhibition at the Gallery

Dates: 10th , 30th January 2025

Location: The Gallery

The Gallery is proud to announce the highly anticipated new exhibition by Spick Jarre, one of the most electrifying and boundary-pushing contemporary artists of our time. Running from 10th to 30th January, this multi-disciplinary showcase promises to blur the lines between art, motion, and human experience.

Spick Jarre’s latest work is a striking melange of mediums, featuring vivid expressionist paintings, monumental sculptures, and her most audacious installation yet: a live, human-sized hamster in a wheel, running continuously for the entire 21-day duration of the show. This bold performance piece encapsulates themes of endurance, futility, and human resilience, offering visitors a unique lens through which to view the passage of time.

Described as “a living dialogue between chaos and control,” Spick Jarre’s work challenges viewers to engage with art not just as an observer, but as an active participant in the experience. The pieces on display will explore the intersections of emotion, energy, and existential inquiry, pushing the boundaries of traditional art forms.

All works in the exhibition are available for purchase, with prices starting at £50,000. This is a rare opportunity to own a piece from one of the most provocative artists working today.

Exhibition Details

• Dates: 10th , 30th January 2025

• Location: The Gallery

• Entry: Free

Press Preview

Members of the press are invited to an exclusive preview on 9th January at 6 PM, where Spick Jarre will provide personal insights into her work and installations. RSVP required.

Join us this January for an unforgettable journey into the bold and uncharted territory of Spick Jarre’s artistic vision. Don’t miss your chance to witness this groundbreaking exhibition.