SIMON DENNY THE PERSONAL EFFECTS OF KIM DOTCOM

4 October – 19 December 2014

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Predator sculpture, Skin-graft, Rotorua, photograph by Tracey Robinson

 

Simon Denny, <em>The Personal Effects of Kim Dotcom</em> 2014, installation view at the Adam Art Gallery, Victoria University of Wellington ©Simon Denny (photo: Shaun Waugh)

Simon Denny, <em>The Personal Effects of Kim Dotcom</em> 2014, installation view at the Adam Art Gallery, Victoria University of Wellington ©Simon Denny (photo: Shaun Waugh)

Simon Denny, <em>The Personal Effects of Kim Dotcom</em> 2014, installation view at the Adam Art Gallery, Victoria University of Wellington ©Simon Denny (photo: Shaun Waugh)

Simon Denny, <em>The Personal Effects of Kim Dotcom</em> 2014, installation view at the Adam Art Gallery, Victoria University of Wellington ©Simon Denny (photo: Shaun Waugh)

Simon Denny, <em>The Personal Effects of Kim Dotcom</em> 2014, installation view at the Adam Art Gallery, Victoria University of Wellington ©Simon Denny (photo: Shaun Waugh)

Simon Denny, <em>The Personal Effects of Kim Dotcom</em> 2014, installation view at the Adam Art Gallery, Victoria University of Wellington ©Simon Denny (photo: Shaun Waugh)

Simon Denny, <em>The Personal Effects of Kim Dotcom</em> 2014, installation view at the Adam Art Gallery, Victoria University of Wellington ©Simon Denny (photo: Shaun Waugh)

 

 

 

The Personal Effects of Kim Dotcom was the first museum-scale solo exhibition in New Zealand by the New Zealand-born, Berlin-based artist Simon Denny. This was a restaging of a major installation first conceived for the Museum moderner Kunst Shiftung Ludwig Wien (mumok) in Vienna, Austria, in July 2013. Taking over all three floors of the Adam Art Gallery, Denny’s exhibition rematerialised the entire inventory of confiscated items taken by New Zealand police (acting for the FBI) during a dramatic raid on the home of German internet entrepreneur, Kim Dotcom, who, at the time faced extradition to the US for charges of copyright infringement, money laundering, and racketeering relating to his now-defunct file-sharing platform, Megaupload.

Consisting of 110 stretched canvases featuring Denny’s graphic representations, conceived in conversation with David Bennewith, of the seized goods, together with a host of objects assembled to stand in for the millionaire’s possessions, this exhibition exemplified the artist’s critical and creative responses to the contested space of the media-sphere, which has for some time been the object of his attention. Denny’s exhibition entailed a dynamic slippage between information, images, and objects. His aim was to see what happens when the logic that functions on the internet is sourced and applied to exhibition making and thus to complicate too-easy distinctions between image and function, original and copy. In focusing on Dotcom’s case, which perfectly bridges these domains, he also set out to question the nature of property, seeking to engage what he calls, “the most important legal discussions of the moment”, which concern the testy relationships between intellectual property and creative copyright, consumer products and consumers’ rights, access to information and the individual’s right to privacy.

The Personal Effects of Kim Dotcom was first presented at Museum moderner Kunst Shiftung Ludwig Wien (mumok) in Vienna, Austria in July 2013. It was recreated at Firstsite in Colchester, England, in March 2014.

The catalogue sold in conjuntion with the exhibition, Simon Denny: The Personal Effects of Kim Dotcom, ed. Matthias Michalka, (mumok & Walther König, Vienna and Cologne, 2013) is available for purchase at the Adam Art Gallery or via the website here.

Simon Denny was born in Auckland, New Zealand. He studied at Elam School of Fine Arts, University of Auckland (2001-5) and Meisterschule, Städelschule, Frankfurt am Main (2007-9). His works have been extensively shown in group and solo exhibitions at prestigious museums, galleries, biennales, and art fairs in Europe, the US, Australia, and New Zealand. Amongst other achievements, in 2012 he was awarded the Baloise Art Prize at Art Statements, Art Basel 43, and he has been selected to represent New Zealand at the 56th Venice Biennale in 2015. Denny lives and works in Berlin, Germany. He is represented by Galerie Buchholz, Cologne; Petzel Gallery, New York; and Michael Lett, Auckland.

This exhibition was generously supported by private donors to the Adam Art Gallery Programme Development Fund and by the many individuals who assisted with its production.

For events associated with the exhibition, please click here to view the public programme.

Public programme recording: Listen to Simon Denny and Nicky Hager in conversation at the Adam Art Gallery 4 October 2014 

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