Crazy Watermelon Shipping

Solo Exhibition at Galleri Bo Bjerggaard · Copenhagen · Denmark · 21 August – 03 October · 2020

Supermarket Fruit · 2020 · 180 x 150 cm.
Supermarket Fruit · 2020 · 180 x 150 cm.

Picture yourself on the very tip of Jutland, on Grenen, a sand spit with a view of a nebulous parking zone for container ships and cruise liners carrying everything from giant, orange gas cylinders to tourists, food and many other things for the potential benefit of us on the shore looking out A strategic spot for parking ships, the sea of Kattegat offers easy access to the whole world.

This is a key point of departure for John Kørner's  (b. 1967)  Crazy Watermelon Shipping. Revolving around issues of consumption and goods in transit, the exhibition examines the global market and how we experience it in everyday life, say at the supermarket when we debate what items to place in our baskets. Some people have only one option when it comes to shopping, others have a few more, while others again have nothing but shopping options.

 

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Kørner, who lives in Nørrebro, Copenhagen, belongs to the last group. He has options galore: greengrocers and specialty shops running the gamut from caramel maker to Polish takeaways, on top of the regular supermarkets. As the artist puts it, each contains a whole world.  "They are all super international. There are oranges from Spain, bananas from South America and olives from Greece. At some point in time, these commodities were in that country. There is an exotic atmosphere, which is fascinating-you get a small taste of another country."

Not only the packaging or the merchandise itself provide an illusion of origin, provenance and the culture of the country where the watermelon is from. The goods are wrapped in a rhetoric and a visual style designed to seduce and fascinate us as consumers. The story is usually one of "authenticity and romance". The powerful sensory experience of shopping at a supermarket or greengrocer also has a dark side of labour exploitation and depletion of natural resources. Still, we should separate our  experience  of  the  goods from the means of their production. Our joy and love of the gaudy perfection of fruits cannot be taken away. It persists, tickling our fancy and drawing us to boxes of red-green apples, yellow bananas and oranges. The sensation is one of immediate beauty.

It is an absurd privilege to sink your teeth into a "crazy watermelon". There is something both fantastic and hugely problematic about this commodity, which has been shipped from another country, another culture, without us giving it a second thought at the moment of purchase. Of course we are aware of the environmental and human costs of this privilege. The watermelon has to be shipped from A to B, or from A to B to C to D, in a container ship, truck or plane, and loads of produce is thrown out when it goes past the expiration date. We have not had to suffer without this privilege even during the Covid-19 crisis, reflecting how commanding the global market and our consumption patterns are. That is why the ships are parked in the Kattegat.

They are awaiting orders about where to deliver their cargo to enable the continued excitation of our senses in the supermarket.

For centuries, shipping has been the primary means of trading goods. As the artist says, "The system is intact and has grown dramatically." In Kørner's exhibition, especially the paintings, we witness a reflection of our trips to the greengrocer  or supermarket. Our senses, above all are eyes, are bombarded by alluring and powerful colours, providing an immediate sensation of enjoyment and fascination. But here, too, there is a flipside. We also see the container ships and the global market We see the woman in front of a frozen food case with an abnormal female body on top. We see a river running through a stringent shelving system stocked with produce.

 

Fanny Lundgren

Studio Manager, MA in art history

 

Photographer: Anders Sune Berg

Galleri Bo Bjerggaard

Flæsketorvet 85 A
1711 Copenhagen V
Denmark

Galleri Bo Bjerggaard

Grenen · 2020 · 150 x 180 cm.
Flooded Supermarket · 2020 · 180x 150 cm.
Shopping at the Creek · 2020 · 150 x 180 cm.
Shopping in a Coat in Greenland · 2020 · 150 x 120 cm.
Abstract Purchase · 2020 · 180 x 150 cm.
Mountain Fruits · 2020 · 150 x 120 cm.
Starring at Each Other · 2020 · 67 x 40 cm.
Characters · 2020 · 67 x 40 cm.
Passing Each Other · 2020 · 67 x 40 cm.
About to Kiss · 2020 · 67 x 40 cm.
Frightened · 2020 · 67 x 40 cm.
Grenen Shipping · 2020· 150 x 180 cm.
Queen Elisabeth Helmut-Schmidt · 2020 · 50 x 81.
Shop Welcomes You · 2020 · 50 x 81 cm.
Fruit Boxes Speaks · 2020 · 50 x 81 cm.
The Future Meets Addidas · 2020 · 50 x 81 cm.
Twisted Addidas · 2020 · 50 x 81 cm.
Explosives · 2020 · 50 x 81 cm.
Super Fruits · 2020 · 50 x 81 cm.
A Stone in Addidas · 2020 · 50 x 81 cm.
Beirut · 2020 · 50 x 81 cm.
A Stone in the Shoe · 2020 · 50 x 81 cm.
Melons · 2020 · 50 x 81 cm.
The Steps of Freedom · 2020 · 50 x 81 cm.
Steps for A. Merkel · 2020 · 50 x 81 cm.
Male Shopping · 2020 · 50 x 81 cm.
Steps for the Ascent · 2020 · 100 x 81 cm.
Desperate · 2020 · 150 x 120 cm.
Explosive Cool Desk · 2020 · 150 x 120 cm.
Shop in Matterhorn · 2020 · 180 x 240 cm.
Eksplosive · 2020 · 150 x 120 cm.
Shopping at 3 Places · 2020 · 150 x 120 cm.
Mountain Shopping · 2020 · 180 x 150 cm.
Melon for Mic. Antonioni · 2020 · 100 x 81 cm.
Hollywood Melons · 2020 · 100 x 81 cm.