Denmark, whose real name is Marc Robbroeckx, was
born in Antwerp in 1950 and studied art history at the University of Ghent from
1968 to 1972. After graduating, he was struck by the mass of books that had
accumulated along the walls of his room, but which brought him no
proportional relief or knowledge. From then on, Denmark chose to tackle what he
considers a crisis of representation: on the one hand the flow of information,
although excessive, does not offer him a satisfactory access to reality, while
on the other hand the evolution of one's own thought does not follow the rhythm
of the de-multiplication of this information. Faced with out-of-control
abundance, he took a turn and became an ‘archivist artist’
A long-term work began. Tired of being over-stimulated, Denmark
considered that "what you don’t know doesn’t hurt you" and, taking
the term ‘press’ literally, tried to reduce the colossal volume of
publications: against mass production of ‘wasted’ paper, the thing to do was
slicing, grinding, pulverising. After destruction, it was time for Denmark to
rebuild. Since the 1970s, he has systematically transformed publications into
objects. With the care of a taxonomist, he avoids ‘useless’ writings and,
ritually repeating the same gestures (gluing, compressing, binding, etc.)
confronts industrial production with his craftsmanship.
Denmark's work has been associated with
movements, which since the 1960s have included industrial and everyday
production in art, such as Pop Art or New Realism. By making works from magazines
and other cheap publications, the artist could also be linked to the Arte
Povera movement, which in the Italy of the 1960s proposed a critique of society
on the basis of poor materials. By using self-criticism as a material, however,
he distinguishes himself from other movements: convinced that truth is
relative, Denmark also calls for reflection through self-mockery. Not a verbal
mockery, but a concrete and materialised one: Denmark who is against the
accumulation archives himself. He has been filing archives for some forty
years, until he has filed the archive files, thus ‘archives³’ (cubed). Finally,
his meticulous and repetitive operations recall, not without irony, the work of
Coptic monks.