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Me and My Sister

Elke Andreas Boon

Annie Gentils Gallery, Antwerp

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Title
Me and My Sister
Gallery
Annie Gentils Gallery, Antwerp
Year
2010
Duration
10 min 30 s
Format & Technical

Single channel, loop, HD video, colour, black and white, sound
5 + 1 AP

  • Music
  • Voice
  • Produced by
  • Postproduction
  • Sound Mix
  • Photography
  • Cast

Colección Amíster Hotel Award 2017

Two very similar women, facing each other at a short distance in a neutral setting where what stands out is the expression and the beauty of their faces. A single action in an endless loop happens: the slow movements of the woman who smokes and exhales the cigarette fumes in the other’s face, provoking irritation until tears come to her eyes. The tension felt during the ten and a half minutes of the video Me and my sister is as strong as it is contained. One couldn’t say why, but in the midst of the silence, there is a certain sensual drive, a sort of antagonism, a kind of eroticism… What might happen between them is left to the viewers’ imaginations: the alternatives are all their own.

Elke Andreas Boon presents the human condition, the singularity of the individual, as the central question of her work. She takes on this topic through interrogation and uneasiness and by posing open situations. She does not give solutions, as is evident in the video, but instead multiplies the questions, leaving them unanswered. This is why they are fertile, generating unforeseen nuances.

The artist’s unique approach in this video exposes one of the fundamental difficulties in the construction of subjectivity and individuals’ identities. Me and my sister is about two twin sisters and points to the relationship between “Me” and the “Other”. Through a personal game of mirrors, she poses questions about the notion of identity and bonds, addressing one of a person’s most pivotal issues, and the main vehicle for multiple and complex meanings: filial love and family roots.

Boon goes further in this articulation by altering the word order of the piece’s title. Placing the first person pronoun at the beginning might suggest an exploration of the individual “me” as it springs from a relationship with the “other”. No one knows which of the two sisters is the “Me”: the one who stares, smokes, and inundates with cigarette fumes, or the one who looks away, remaining impassive to the other’s actions. Whichever one it is, this piece is a suggestive way of addressing the difficulty of thinking about ourselves separately from our family environments, as well as how to make this visible or represent it. These questions coincide with the nature of the chosen media: video. The camera —a single seeing eye— faces the others, who think of themselves in reference to it.

Blanca del Río

Stills

Still

Elke Andreas Boon

Artist

Ghent

Elke Andreas Boon

Elke Andreas Boon (Ghent) uses different media to create installations. By assembling their photos, drawings, videos, and sculptures, they create an environment where hyper individualistic feelings are sublimated into a sense of ephemeral beauty. The base of Boon’s work is formed by their innate fascination with people, their connections, their emotions and uncertainties. Tensions created in “answering to” or “escaping from” patterns of social expectations, which revolve around age, beauty or gender, always recur in Boon’s work. As an artist, their power lies in locating the sensitivities that define us as human, laying them bare, and raising them to a level of aesthetic awareness. After an initially beautiful, often sensual impression of their creations, another reality can soon surface, confronting the spectator with an indeterminate doubt about human fate. Their work couples a poetic and escapist imagination with a raw vision on our human condition. Their work thus bears witness to a very personal sensibility, lightness and nimbleness. It is not the illustration of an idea but the result of multiple and diverse impulses that form an ambiguous whole. For Elke Andreas Boon, artistry is a radical choice for freedom, an attempt to go beyond the tethering of social structures. Thanks to their imagination and rebellious attitude towards life, they succeed in challenging rusted patterns, generating new insights on what it is to be human.