DAY CARE DRILL

Invitation


Excretion is automatic, but how we do it is not. Parents are advised to teach their children how to use a toilet when they’re around 18-24 months, and diapers are substituted for toddler toilets. Scaled down for smaller limbs, they resemble the real thing but without the architectonic devices — doors, walls, dividers — that define their referent. For what is considered the most intimate of architectural spaces, privacy is earned not given. Like with most training techniques, these are performative objects, like stage sets, upon which the digestive rites of adulthood are mimed under the watchful gaze of parents.

Like children’s toilets, children’s toys are designed more for the buyer than the user. For example, when the toy company Hasbro released the first “G.I. Joe” in 1964, they coined the term “action figure” to appeal to gender-anxious mid-century American parents who didn’t want their boys playing with dolls. Since then, action figure has become the generic eponym for posable plastic toys marketed male — a wide range of products that shift with the times. Not long after the militaristic original hit shelves, cop-themed action figures emerged, including those released in conjunction with the 1970s crime drama show S.W.A.T., which chronicled the fictional adventures of a “Special Weapons And Tactics” team in California.

Violent delights marketed to children, whether action figures or video games, offer a projection screen for the adult world that makes them. For some, they’re the cause of all the blood and guts smeared across our grown-up world — a scapegoat for the AR-15s wielded by young adults (if not those by the men-in-blue who swat them down as they enter school). Others construe them as a cathartic device, or at least a palliative, for the violence that children perceive around them: a way to get your gusto for gore out of the system through play acting. Violence is presented as a socially-transmitted disease, and role-play as either predictive or prophylactic. Everyone eventually grows up, of course; some become cops themselves, while others become collectors. Today 1:6 scale action figures are tailored as much to children as adults — infantilized violence matured into a speculative market.

For DAY CARE DRILL, an exhibition at Blue Velvet Projects in Zürich, Anne de Vries brings his lion-in-knight’s-armor into a drama of toy policing. The exhibition constitutes the next chapter in the avatar’s twisted hero’s journey, which has unfolded across different spaces and pages throughout the last year. Previously the heraldic figure stomped its paws across landscapes of sand, first at Berlin’s Fragile Gallery and later at the former building of the famous Tresorclub. Not long after, the knight became De Wachter: a public sculpture perched on the roof of the Dutch secret service in Zoetermeer. At Blue Velvet Project, the monument peers domestic and dresses in drag. It invades a children’s nursery inflected with sadistic intent — a fever dream of infantilized power and infant power structures. 1:6 scale SWAT figures are made sticky with chocolate syrup, posed on cradles, and deflated by the brass-patinated, engorged paws of de Vries’ heraldic lion in armor. DAY CARE DRILL interrogates childhood tropes as a proxy for adulthood, when role-play delaminates. Characters become identities, props appear structural, and when the performance is misperformed, it signifies something else: artificiality.


Text by Nicholas Korody
The Exhibition is on view at Blue Velvet Projects until October 29th, 2022

DEEP SCROLL

DEEP SCROLL 380 pages artist publication produced in collaboration with AISSystem and Onomatopee.
This first edition contains contributions by Amalia Groom, Iain Hamilton Grant, Nicholas Korody, Theodore Gracyk, Gary Allen, Jesse Paul Crane-Seebe, Jenna Sutela, Alain Badiou, Ariella Azoulay, Steve Goodman, Robert Minto, Sarah Friend, Marcel Mrejen, Dorota Gawęda and Eglė Kulbokaitė, William Kherbek, Sam Jacob, and many others.
Published by Onomatopee


Windy

Title: Windy
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2020
Dimensions: 200 × 150 cm
Materials and Techniques: Linen canvas (380g), gesso, acrylic paint, UV print.
Includes a photograph of trees near the Chelsea Piers, visual elements from The Rat God by Richard Corben (specifically, hands), and a rendered image of a Paris apartment by Bertrand Benoit. Mounted in an oakwood artist frame.

Homo Machina

Title: Homo Machina
Artist: Anne de Vries
Material: Canvas 380g, Gesso, Paint, Photography, CGI, UV-print, aluminum artist frame.

Title: Homo Machina
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2020
Dimensions: 166 x 126 x 4 cm
Materials: 380g canvas, gesso, paint, photography, CGI, UV-print, aluminum artist frame.

Anarchy in the Hive Mind

Title: Anarchy in the Hive Mind
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2020
Dimensions: 191 × 141 × 4.5 cm
Materials and Techniques: Linen canvas (380g), gesso, photographic imagery of flowers, cartoon bees and hornets, CGI, UV print.
Mounted on a double wooden stretcher with an aluminum artist’s frame.

Entwurf zu ‘kleine Freude’ Etude pour ‘Petites joies’

Title: Entwurf zu ‘kleine Freude’ / Étude pour ‘Petites joies’
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2015
Dimensions: 517 × 347 × 50 mm
Edition: Unique, signed
Materials: Archival UV print on Photo Forex, wooden frame with acrylic paint
Techniques: Digital collage combining photographs taken by the artist at various crowd gatherings with laser light shows, and visual elements from works by Wassily Kandinsky.
The title references Kandinsky’s compositions and writings on the relationship between people, music, and color.

Boids

Title: Boids
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2015
Dimensions: Various
Materials: Polystyrene with UV print on vinyl wrap

Subject Matter:
Composed of photographic imagery from a range of social, political, and religious gatherings, including:

  • Hong Kong Protest, 2015
  • Hajj in Mecca, September 2014
  • Tunisian Protest, January 2011
  • Je Suis Charlie March, Place de la République, Paris, January 2015
  • Martin Luther King Jr.’s speech, Washington D.C., August 1963
  • Guatemala Rises Up, May 2015
  • …and others

Conceptual Background:
Before feathers enabled flight, they first evolved in dinosaurs for terrestrial functions—such as thermal regulation, camouflage, or signaling. Over geological timescales, these structures were co-opted into entirely new uses, eventually granting birds the power of flight. In evolutionary biology, this phenomenon is known as exaptation: a trait originally evolved for one purpose that is later repurposed for another.

Recent computational models of E. coli suggest that many traits begin as exaptations. This concept counters deterministic views of biology, emphasizing instead contingency and transformation. If forms and functions in nature can be radically retooled—enabling creatures to fly over mountains or swim through oceans—it is because matter itself is inherently open, mutable, and devoid of fixed essence.

The world is constantly reconfiguring itself. Structures we see today may serve vastly different purposes tomorrow. Each moment offers a new configuration—dependent, impermanent, and full of latent potential. The artworks in Boids engage with this idea: that form, function, and meaning are fluid, and that the universe, like the self, is continually becoming.

Installation views from E_MERGE at Foam Museum, Amsterdam and Asdzáá nádleehé curated by Timur Si-Qin at Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York

GILLETTE, IDEAL CITY PROPOSAL


Title: GILLETTE’S, IDEAL CITY PROPOSAL
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2014
Dimensions: Various
Materials: Double-sided UV prints on Photo Forex, PVC, mirror, coated metal hanging system, screws, Gillette razors, clothing.

Conceptual Background:
This body of work draws inspiration from The Dream of King Camp Gillette and his radical proposal for a future urban society. Before becoming known for inventing the safety razor and establishing a major industrial enterprise, King Camp Gillette (1855–1932) authored several books and pamphlets outlining his vision for a transformed economic and social system.

In his first major tract, The Human Drift, Gillette proposed the creation of a single, highly organized, technologically advanced megacity called “Metropolis.” Designed to house the entire population—excluding agricultural and rural labor—this urban complex would be constructed using cutting-edge materials and systems. Gillette envisioned this society as being administered by “The United Company,” a unified organization responsible for producing, manufacturing, and distributing all necessities of life.

Although often grouped with utopian literature such as Edward Bellamy’s Looking Backward, Gillette’s proposal reads not just as speculative fiction, but as a sincere (if eccentric) urban and social engineering plan. As both an inventor and idealist, Gillette’s “Metropolis” functions as a kind of verbal prototype—an industrial-era working model of a unified and optimized future city.

Artistic Approach:
Through precision photographs of Gillette’s shaving products, used as the basis for sculptural forms and visual layering, this work explores the intersections of utopian architecture and the refined industrial design of Gillette’s iconic shaving systems.



Around the Eye

Title: Around the Eye
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2013
Materials: Digital print on extruded polystyrene (XPS), plexiglass, aluminum frame

Steps of Recursion – ICG

anne de vries

Title: Steps of Recursion on rail – ICG
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2012
Dimensions: 135 × 110 × 75 cm
Materials: Steel frame, UV print, plastic

Steps of Recursion – Tuned

Title: Steps of Recursion – Tuned
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2012
Dimensions: 220 × 150 × 65 cm
Materials: Stainless steel construction with photographic prints on plastic

Image Transfers

Title:
Image Transfers – Apple, Pear and Banana
Image Transfers – Apple, Avocado and Lemon
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2012
Dimensions: 160 × 70 cm
Materials: Digital print on photo paper

About:
These two digital prints deconstruct their own production process. Beginning as still-life photographs of supermarket fruit, the image journeys through the digital pipeline—lens, sensor, wiring, computer components, software—until it materializes as ink on paper, hung on the wall with hooks and clips.

The deceptively simple arrangement is layered with an informational panorama that reveals the production chain’s circumstances and locations, positioning the fruit as the final eventuation of this global process. Superimposed in small type over the still-life are inscriptions including the retailer’s name and address and the primary production companies involved, tracing the artwork’s roots in today’s global economy.

Exhibition History:
Winterthur Museum in Winterthur; Frans Hals Museum in Haarlem; Foam Museum in Amsterdam; Sandy Brown in Berlin; Nest Museum, Den Haag; Martin van Zomeren, Amsterdam

Image Transfer : Jalapeños, Rucola, Peanuts, Champignon

Titles:
Image Transfer: Jalapeños, Rucola, Peanuts
Image Transfer: Jalapeños, Peanuts, Champignons
Image Transfer: Rucola, Jalapeños, Peanuts
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2019
Dimensions: 160 × 70 cm (each)

About:
These digital prints deconstruct their own production process. Beginning as still-life photographs of supermarket produce captured by a digital camera, the image travels through the entire digital pipeline—lens, sensor, wiring, computer components, software—until it materializes as ink on paper, hung on the wall with hooks and clips.

The deceptively simple arrangement is layered with an informational panorama that reveals the circumstances and locations of the production chain, positioning the produce as the final eventuation of this global process. Superimposed in small type over the still-life are inscriptions including the retailer’s name and address and the primary production companies involved, tracing the dynamic roots of the artwork’s production in today’s global economy.

CAVE2CAVE2CAVE

Title: CAVE2CAVE2CAVE
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2019
Dimensions: Overall width 700 cm, comprising 150 × 100 × 3.5 cm stretchers
Materials: UV-RGB-W print on mirror-coated PVC; aluminum P35 stretchers with aluminum artist frames

CAVE2CAVE 2019

Titles:
CAVE2CAVE_1379, CAVE2CAVE_0671, CAVE2CAVE_0807,
CAVE2CAVE_9850, CAVE2CAVE_1339, CAVE2CAVE_0613

Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2019
Dimensions: 150 × 100 × 3.5 cm (each)
Materials: UV-RGB-W print on mirror-coated PVC, mounted on aluminum P35 stretchers, housed within aluminum artist frames

CAVE2CAVE

Title: CAVE2CAVE
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2011–2019
Dimensions: 130 × 100 cm (51.18 × 39.37 in)
Materials: UV print on mirror foil, aluminum frame

About:
This work features photographs of wrinkled reflections of cave paintings, UV-printed onto mirror foil stretched over a frame. The reflective surface creates a dynamic interaction between image and environment, emphasizing the interplay of history and contemporary technology.

Interface

Two artworks, Interface – Easy Jet and Interface Mushashi, were installed in the exhibition RUIS, curated by Melanie Bühler and acquired by the Frans Hals Museum, Haarlem.

At the Shores

Title: At the Shores
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2013
Dimensions: 65 × 160 cm
Materials: Digital prints, framed

About:
While many of the computer-generated events assigned to these random dates will probably not take place, some computer-generated speculations—such as those made by NASA and the scientific community at large—may indeed occur.

 

FORECAST

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Title: Forecast
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2011
Material: HD video projection
Dimensions: 300 × 135 cm projection screen
Length: 5-minute loop
Sound: James Whipple (aka M.E.S.H.)
Text: Excerpts from Bertrand Russell’s A.B.C. of Relativity — Philosophical consequences

About:
Forecast is a computer-generated video featuring a camera panning through photographs of a blue sky with clouds over Amsterdam. A slow voice guides the viewer through specific segments of Bertrand Russell’s ABC of Relativity, explaining the distinctions between actuality and perception, and addressing relativity theory and concepts of space-time. Midway, the spoken text transitions into music, leading the viewer into a more associative, immersive experience.

Documentation: Views from Kunsthal Charlottenborg in Denmark, Max Mayer Gallery in Dusseldorf, and E_MERGE at Foam Museum.

Watch the preview version of FORECAST here

Whole World Overview

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Title: Whole World Overview
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2011
Dimensions: 220 cm (diameter)
Materials and Techniques: UV print on Dibond and 4 mm Plexiglass
About:
This artwork was created by Anne de Vries in collaboration with NASA’s Whole World satellite photography. The imagery is stretched into a circular format (from North Pole to South Pole), evoking ancient Sun Crosses and Sun Wheels.
Documentation by: Future Gallery Berlin

Air Gap Hold On

Title: Air Gap Hold On
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2012
Dimensions: 117 × 60 × 8 cm
Materials: Stainless steel, digital print on towel, digital print on plastic

About:
The title refers to the concept of an air gap in both plumbing and networking contexts. In plumbing, an air gap is the unobstructed vertical space between a water outlet and the flood level of a fixture, preventing contaminated water from flowing back into the potable water system. In networking, an air gap is a security measure isolating secure computer networks physically from insecure ones, such as the public internet, to prevent unauthorized data flow. This work reflects on these ideas of separation, protection, and control.

Infinite Value

annedevries_infinite_value

Title: Infinite Value
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2009
Dimensions: 5 × 74 × 53 cm
Materials: Three digital prints layered within a custom wooden frame

About:
This work features three digital prints overlaid inside a custom-made wooden frame. By milling out sections of the first print, another version of the same image is revealed, creating a layered visual effect.

Katanga Bub

Title: Katanga Bub
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2011
Dimensions: 35.43 × 56.69 inches
Materials: Mobile devices mounted on a lightbox displaying a press image of the Katanga mines in the Congo, rephotographed underwater

About:
Katanga Bub brings together the extreme ends of the mobile device industry. It is based on a press image depicting the landscape and workers of Katanga in the Democratic Republic of Congo—an area mined for minerals like tungsten and coltan, essential for mobile device production. The press image has been rephotographed underwater and presented within a freestanding display unit. As water ripples and bubbles distort the scene beneath, the screens of numerous mobile devices display clearer details of the same Katanga mine view. This fusion of the earthy origins of mining and the liquefied luxury of global technology commodities explores the relationship between material extraction and digital information. The work highlights the dual narrative: while mobile devices help disseminate knowledge and raise global awareness with the promise of a better world, the rare earth economy also supports problematic social and political infrastructures in Congo. It reveals the recursive links between matter and information, tracing the path from raw material to data generation.

Exhibition views from: Trails Rising at Sandy Brown Gallery, Berlin; The Composing Rooms, London; and Treijac Project, France.

Timetables

Title: Timetables
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2011
Size: Variable
Materials: Wood, metal, ceramic, digital photo prints on tables
About: This piece features photographs taken from the clouds above Amsterdam in 2007.
Exhibition views from: TruEye surView curated by Katja Novitskova at W139 in Amsterdam

 

Play R’ Grip

Title: Tech No Grind
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2010
Materials: Wood, metal, rubber, plastics, UV print


Title: Play-R Grip
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2010
Materials: Smashed tennis racket on the wall with an integrated audio headset


Title: Turn A round
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2010
Materials: Digital prints on laminated wooden display boxes, plastics
Size: Variable


Title: Private Goods
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2009
Materials: Wood, digital print, plastic, rubber

PLAN

Plan

Title: Plan
Artist: Anne de Vries
Year: 2005
Material: C-print
Dimensions: 60 × 45 cm

The Opening

'The Opening' an event, performance and installation by artist Anne de Vries and Alberto de Michele, 2003

Title: The Opening
Artists: Anne de Vries, Alberto De Michele
Date: May 22–27, 2000
About:
An art performance, installation, and event held over the course of one workweek at the Gerrit Rietveld Pavilion in Amsterdam. During this time, the two artists confined themselves inside a black cube furnished with only essential amenities: a bed, food, a toilet, and a single small pocket camera whose flash served as their sole source of light.