Superfiction


A superfiction is a visual or conceptual artwork that uses fiction and appropriation to blur the lines between facts and reality about organizations, business structures, and/or the lives of invented individuals.
The term was coined by Glasgow-born artist Peter Hill in 1989. Hill said he drew inspiration from Karl Popper's concept of "falsificationism," Thomas Kuhn's book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, and anarchist Paul Feyerabend's book Against Method. Hill's website also calls the fiction of Jorge Luis Borges as an example.

The Museum of Contemporary Ideas

In 1989 Peter Hill created his fictive Museum of Contemporary Ideas. Supposedly located on New York's Park Avenue, the museum's purported billionaire benefactors, Alice and Abner "Bucky" Cameron, were said to have made their fortune from the Cameron Oil Fields in Alaska. Press releases were sent around the world to news agencies such as Reuters and Associated Press and a range of magazines, newspapers, museums, critics and specialist journals. The German Wolkenkratzer magazine believed the museum to be real and printed a story about it. As a result its editor, Dr Wolfgang Max Faust was asked to chair a meeting of German curators and industrialists to see if Frankfurt could build an even bigger multi-disciplinary museum than The Museum of Contemporary Ideas.
The characters within the Museum of Contemporary Ideas were later "turned" into another Superfiction called The Art Fair Murders and traces of both were exhibited in the , Fantastic, curated by Richard Grayson.
With its "Encyclopedia of Superfictions", Hill's Web site is something of an information hub on methodologically related artworks.
Probably the first curated exhibition of superfictions was "For Real Now" in 1990 .

Roots and precedents

The practice of intentionally blurring the boundaries between fiction and fact has many precedents. Perhaps the best known of these is Orson Welles' adaptation of H. G. Wells'
The War Of The Worlds which was broadcast in the style of a breaking-news report in October 1938, and led many to believe in an ongoing Martian invasion despite a broadcast disclaimer.
Another example are the "snouters" Nasobēm, an order of animals invented by the German poet Christian Morgenstern in 1905 and then introduced into scholarly publication by the naturalist Prof. Harald Stümpke.

Practice

Artists employing superfictions as a focus or significant part of their practice include:
  • AA Bronson – General Idea
  • – paintings of fictional worlds
  • Kay Burns – performative lectures as the fictitious researcher/ethnographer Iris Taylor; and founder/curator of the Museum of the Flat Earth
  • Janet Cardiff – many audio-walks that superimpose fiction and experience since the mid-1990s,
  • "et al." – e.g.
  • Joan Fontcuberta – e.g.
  • Rodney Glick – e.g.
  • Iris Häussler – many "fictitious memories", constructed living spaces of fictional personae
  • Oren Herschander – , an archive featuring a variety of material related to the life and work of American photographer and fictitious entry, Lillian Virginia Mountweazel.
  • Peter Hill –
  • Damien Hirst – Treasures from the Wreck of the Unbelievable
  • Res Ingold – e.g.
  • – Shelly Innocence is a former supermodel, international athlete and in-store demonstrator marketing Happiness™, Integrity™ and other intangible products. 2005
  • Fat to Food Recycling, Glocal Affairs 2008, Mieke Smits
  • Martin Kippenberger – inventions of fictional artists in the 1980s, within a much broader oeuvre of painting
  • Eve Andree Laramee has exhibited works credited to , a fictional scientist with some elements based on the artist's father.
  • Dr James Lattin – founder and curator of the
  • Leeds 13 – a year group of University of Leeds fine art students whose project Going Places simulated a Spanish holiday apparently paid for with financial donations
  • Seymour Likely – a fictitious artist invented by Aldert Mantje, Ronald Hooft and Ido Vunderink
  • Beauvais Lyons – Professor of Art at University of Tennessee and curator of the which includes the Association for Creative Zoology, Hokes Medical Arts and the Spelvin Collection among others.
  • Hugo Markl — Contemporary artist Hugo Markl performs a concentrated reflection on receptive processes per se – deliberate intellectual error – in relation to the processing of text, film, and art: tradition, culture change, and art movement understood as intellectual auto-digestion. Within every tradition, overcoming artistic and intellectual key works has been characterized by mixing facts with fiction.
  • and present The Collector
  • Rebekah Modrak