Training Ground (2007)
By Aernout Mik
Aernout Mik: Training Ground Rituals of Engagment Essay by Claudia Schmuckli Training Ground (2006), a looping thirty-eight-minute, two-channel-video installation by the Dutch artist Aernout Mik, is part on an ongoing investigation into what he characterizes as defining constituents of contemporary Western society. Having first explored the notion of civil war in pieces such as Raw Footage and Scapegoats (both 2006), he then turned his attention to the issue of illegal immigration. Training Ground, which was at the core of Citizens and Subjects, Mik’s contribution to the Fifty-second Venice Biennale, is exemplary of his recent engagement with pressing issues in the larger geopolitical arena and their metaphoric relevance to the uncertain condition of today’s world. For the first ten minutes watching Training Ground, the viewer unfamiliar with Mik’s work might be fooled into believing that she is looking at footage of an actual training exercise for police officers in northern Europe as they are instructed in the ways to apprehend refugees and illegal immigrants. The uniformed and armed officials are assembled casually, receiving instructions and watching demonstrations of body s…
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