MEECHFIEBER by
Exhibitions / Meechfieber / Overview
JOHN BOCK. MEECHFIEBER
Sala Reale, Stazione Centrale, Milan
November 9 – December 5, 2004
Half mad scientist and half Buster Keaton, both a naughty child and a philosopher of chaos, John Bock constructs his installations, performances and videos as playful, surreal universes in which logic seems strangely befuddled—miniature worlds where everything is both connected and isolated. As in some noisy colorful carnival parade, his masked characters are fuelled by a chaotic energy, their actions trapped in an illogical, fanciful theatre of the absurd. A giant magnifying glass trained on the simplest, most insignificant objects, Bock's work constantly blends different ideas and elements, which are bound together and interwoven to build a tower of Babel that echoes with sounds, colors and images. His videos and performances are derailments of thought and yet lucid collages of different languages and traditions, transforming daily life and para-scientific wisdom into an endless anthology of gags, puppets, circus acrobats, and popular traditions turned upside down.
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1850
MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 1/17
Photo Marco De Scalzi
MEECHFIEBER, 2004
16mm film transferred to DVD, color, sound, 37'
Cast John Bock, Lars Rudolph, Anne Tismer; Camera David Schultz; Editing Marc Aschenbrenner
Commissioned and produced by Fondazione Nicola Trussardi and Carnegie International 2004–2005, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
Installation view, Sala Reale, Milan
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York -
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MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 2/17
Photo Marco De Scalzi
MEECHFIEBER, 2004
16mm film transferred to DVD, color, sound, 37'
Cast John Bock, Lars Rudolph, Anne Tismer; Camera David Schultz; Montaggio Marc Aschenbrenner
Commissioned and produced by Fondazione Nicola Trussardi and Carnegie International 2004–2005, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
Installation view, Sala Reale, Milan
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York
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1843
MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 3/17
Photo Marco De Scalzi
TRAIL OF DEUTSCHE BANK, 2002
Video, color, sound, 9 frames, 2'' loop
Installation view, Sala Reale, Milan
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York -
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MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 4/17
Photo Marco De Scalzi
GAST, 2004
Video, color, sound, 11'30''
Camera John Bock; Camera and editing Marc Aschenbrenner
HMT Collection, Berlin
Installation view, Sala Reale, Milan
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York -
1853
MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 5/17
GAST, 2004
Video, color, sound, 11'30''
Video still
Camera John Bock; Camera and editing Marc Aschenbrenner
HMT Collection, Berlin
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York
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1842
MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 6/17
Photo Marco De Scalzi
ALICE COOPER, 2001
Video, color, sound, 4’56’’
Camera Knut Klaßen; Editing Marc Aschenbrenner
Installation view, Sala Reale, Milan
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York -
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MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 7/17
ALICE COOPER, 2001
Video, color, sound, 4’56’’
Video still
Camera Knut Klaßen; Editing Marc Aschenbrenner
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York
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1847
by John Bock 8/17
Photo Marco De Scalzi
BOXER, 2002
Video, color, sound, 2’30’’
Camera Knut Klaßen; Editing Marc Aschenbrenner
Charles Asprey Collection, London
Installation view, Sala Reale, Milan
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York -
1841
MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 9/17
BOXER, 2002
Video, color, sound, 2’30’’
Video still
Camera Knut Klaßen; Editing Marc Aschenbrenner
Charles Asprey Collection, London
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York
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1845
MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 10/17
Photo Marco De Scalzi
A GENTLEMAN WORKS WHEN A GENTLEMAN WORKS A WORK, 2002
Performance, Documenta 11, Kassel, video, color, sound, 28’11’’
Camera Knut Klaßen; Editing Marc Aschenbrenner
Snare / Christiansen Collection, Oslo
Installation view, Sala Reale, Milan
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York -
1854
MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 11/17
A GENTLEMAN WORKS WHEN A GENTLEMAN WORKS A WORK, 2002
Performance, Documenta 11, Kassel, video, color, sound, 28’11’’
Video still
Camera Knut Klaßen; Editing Marc Aschenbrenner
Snare / Christiansen Collection, Oslo
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York
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1848
MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 12/17
Photo Marco De Scalzi
MEECHFIEBER, 2004
16mm film transferred to DVD, color, sound, 37'
Cast John Bock, Lars Rudolph, Anne Tismer; Camera David Schultz; Editing Marc Aschenbrenner
Commissioned and produced by Fondazione Nicola Trussardi and Carnegie International 2004–2005, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
Installation view, Sala Reale, Milan
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York -
1844
MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 13/17
Photo Marco De Scalzi
MEECHFIEBER, 2004
16mm film transferred to DVD, color, sound, 37'
Cast John Bock, Lars Rudolph, Anne Tismer; Camera David Schultz; Editing Marc Aschenbrenner
Commissioned and produced by Fondazione Nicola Trussardi and Carnegie International 2004–2005, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
Installation view, Sala Reale, Milan
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York -
1856
MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 14/17
MEECHFIEBER, 2004
16mm film transferred to DVD, color, sound, 37'
Video still
Cast John Bock, Lars Rudolph, Anne Tismer; Camera David Schultz; Editing Marc Aschenbrenner
Commissioned and produced by Fondazione Nicola Trussardi and Carnegie International 2004–2005, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York
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1857
MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 15/17
MEECHFIEBER, 2004
16mm film transferred to DVD, color, sound, 37'
Video still
Cast John Bock, Lars Rudolph, Anne Tismer; Camera David Schultz; Editing Marc Aschenbrenner
Commissioned and produced by Fondazione Nicola Trussardi and Carnegie International 2004–2005, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York
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1851
MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 16/17
MEECHFIEBER, 2004
16mm film transferred to DVD, color, sound, 37'
Video still
Cast John Bock, Lars Rudolph, Anne Tismer; Camera David Schultz; Editing Marc Aschenbrenner
Commissioned and produced by Fondazione Nicola Trussardi and Carnegie International 2004–2005, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York
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1855
MEECHFIEBER by John Bock 17/17
MEECHFIEBER, 2004
16mm film transferred to DVD, color, sound, 37'
Video still
Cast John Bock, Lars Rudolph, Anne Tismer; Camera David Schultz; Editing Marc Aschenbrenner
Commissioned and produced by Fondazione Nicola Trussardi and Carnegie International 2004–2005, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
Courtesy John Bock; Klosterfelde, Berlin; Anton Kern, New York
In the elegant, austere setting of the royal waiting room in Milan’s central railway station, John Bock presents the European premiere of his first full-length film: Meechfieber (Milk Fever, 2004) is a unique, fanciful encyclopedia of the characters who live in Bock’s deranged world. Set on the farm in Gribbohm where the artist was born and raised, Meechfieber recounts the grotesque adventures of a farm couple who must come to grips with surreal machines, bric-à-brac spaceships, costumed animals and frenetic dances. Featuring two professional actors, Anne Tismer and Lars Rudolph, the latter of whom appeared in Run Lola Run (1999), Meechfieber is John Bock’s first work shot on film. A slapstick comedy and imaginary journey through everyday life, Meechfieber was co-produced by Fondazione Nicola Trussardi and the 54th Carnegie International at the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh.
For his first solo show with an Italian institution, John Bock decided for the first time in his career to present only videos and films. In Gast (Guest, 2004) Bock’s pet rabbit hops curiously through the living room amid furniture, rugs, sofas, and carrots; in Boxer (2002) two characters dressed up as circus clowns fight in a makeshift ring amid a riot of geometric masks, colorful protuberances, dirty punches and flying vegetables; in Alice Cooper (2001), the artist, decked out as a rock star, runs from one side of the screen to the other as if on a concert stage or in a packed stadium; in Trail of Deutsche Bank (2002), he struggles with a lawnmower gone berserk; and in A gentleman works when a gentleman works a work (2002), two puppets help him describe the hidden mechanisms of his eccentric personal world.
Officially opened in 1931 to replace a previous transport hub that dated back to 1864, Milan’s Stazione Centrale was designed by Ulisse Stacchini in 1912, who modeled it after Union Station in Washington, DC. The vast building is truly majestic, and Frank Lloyd Wright called it the most beautiful railway station in the world. At the far end of its right wing is the Sala Reale pavilion, a luxurious space that was once a waiting room reserved for the use of King Vittorio Emanuele II and members of the House of Savoy. This pavilion is laid out on two floors, with the actual Sala Reale at platform level, and Sala delle Armi at street level; it has a separate entrance that gives onto Piazza Luigi di Savoia, just next to the infamous underground track 21, where deportation trains would set off for concentration camps under the Fascist regime. Luxuriously decorated, the room also bears witness to the damnatio memoriae that took place in Italy after the fall of Fascism. Decorations depicting Mussolini were torn away, but swastikas can still be found among the inlays of the wooden floor: a macabre tribute to dictator Adolf Hitler, who visited Sala Reale on one of his trips to Italy.
John Bock was born in Gribbohm, Germany in 1965, and lives and works in Berlin. Many cultural institutions have organized solo exhibitions of his work, including the KW Institute for Contemporary Art in Berlin (2009), P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center in New York (2007), Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt (2007), FRAC in Marseilles (2005), the Institute of Contemporary Art in London (2004), the Museum of Modern Art in New York (2000), Kunsthalle Basel (1999) and Wiener Secession in Vienna (1998). His performance pieces, sculptures and films have been featured in major international contemporary art festivals such as Performa in New York (2007), the Venice Biennale (2005 and 1999), Manifesta 5 in Donostia-San Sebastián (2004), Documenta 11 in Kassel (2002), and the Yokohama Triennale (2001). He has taken part in group shows at the Museum of Modern Art in New York (2009), Centre Pompidou in Paris (2009), the Barbican Art Gallery and the Hayward Gallery in London (2008), ZKM Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie Karlsruhe (2008), Malmö Kunsthalle (2008), the New Museum in New York (2007), and Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall (2007).