Two years in the past, Poland’s entry for the 2024 Biennale precipitated a stir domestically after the unique choice, a mission by the artist Ignacy Czwartos, was cancelled by the incoming centrist authorities of Donald Tusk. Having considered Czwartos’s work as being too intently aligned with the earlier authorities’s nationalistic agenda, many working professionally within the artwork scene had been delighted to see the Polish painter changed with a video-based mission by Ukraine’s Open Group collective.
This time round, the nation’s entry—an audio-video set up by the Polish artists Bogna Burska and Daniel Kotowski—is much less prone to trigger such friction, with the extra progressive facet of the artwork scene at the moment coexisting extra comfortably with Tusk’s coalition authorities than was the case below the earlier regime.
Created in shut collaboration with the curators Ewa Chomicka and Jolanta Woszczenko, Liquid Tongues centres on a efficiency by the Chór w Ruchu (Choir in Movement) that features each listening to and deaf performers, with a lot of the content material recorded underwater in a Warsaw swimming pool. Introduced throughout two screens, with a type of set to be suspended above the heads of holiday makers as they enter the Polish pavilion, early previews recommend audiences can count on a visually arresting and sonically charged manufacturing that takes inspiration from whale track to discover “various modes of communication”.
Liquid Tongues builds on a efficiency by the Choir in Movement the artists collaborated on at Warsaw’s Zachęta Nationwide Gallery of Artwork final 12 months. Initially based in 2014, the choir has a shifting membership that adapts to completely different tasks, with Kotowski facilitating the inclusion of deaf performers for each the Zachęta efficiency and the Venice mission. Whereas the previous featured a mix of spoken Polish and Polish Signal Language, Liquid Tongues makes use of spoken English and Worldwide Signal.
Burska and Kotowski sketched out among the concepts developed in Liquid Tongues by filming underwater within the Baltic final summer season, however felt the extra managed surroundings of an indoor swimming pool can be higher suited to each the winter schedule and the variety of members concerned within the manufacturing for Venice. Even so, the artists say that filming underwater nonetheless proved to be one of the difficult components of the manufacturing, with Burska noting that “plenty of rehearsals” had been required to know the change in optics and the water’s “disorientating” impact.
Taking pictures on the pool over three days, Kotowski says that it was solely after the performers had practised on land and the crew “had been totally positive that they had every little thing prepared and in place, technically and with the movie crew” that they might proceed within the water. The artist, who’s deaf himself, provides that the necessity to fine-tune the signed components of the efficiency, in addition to components comparable to how deaf audiences would understand the choir’s facial expressions, added an additional layer to manage.
Past the sensible issues of the shoot, the idea of performing underwater performs an necessary function within the pondering behind the mission, embracing an area the place signal language retains its means to speak successfully whereas spoken speech turns into distorted and unreliable. Burska says that was noticeable on set the place, even out of the water, the acoustics of the swimming pool left the listening to members of the crew discovering it more durable to speak than their deaf colleagues.
Liquid Tongues can also be notable for the collaborative nature of the mission, drawing on the abilities of a number of members and completely different disciplines. Alongside the choir and movie crew, further inventive enter comes from choreography by Alicja Czyczel and a choral and musical rating by Aleksandra Gryka.
• Giardini

