Patterns of social, scientific, and technological transformations. From the 200 proposals received through the public call, the curators have chosen 40 works from all over the world: works that are considered to be contextual seedbeds for social change. The exhibition will be accompanied by public lectures, Renewable Futures conference as well as artist performances and concerts.
The changing role of art in society is one where it does not just create a new aesthetics but gets involved in
patterns of social, scientific, and technological transformations. Fields, jointly curated by Rasa Smite, Raitis
Smits and Armin Medosch, presents an inquiry into patterns of renewal and transition. The curators asked
which expanded fields of artistic practice offer new ideas for overcoming the crisis of the present and
developing new models of a more sustainable and imaginative way of life.
In preparation for the Fields exhibition, a widespread survey was undertaken, that did not just look at art in
the narrow sense but all kinds of creative practices that bring together new thinking, scientific knowledge,
aesthetics, technologies and social practices. A year in advance, a public call was launched that was met by
over 200 proposals. The curators of Fields could draw on international networks such as RIXC's Renewable
Network and the European collaborations Techno-Ecologies and Soft-Control. The artist-in-residency series
Fieldwork on measurement ship Eleonore, Linz 2013, aimed at creating ideas and projects for Fields.
Workshops and panels at Transmediale 2013 – Berlin, Pixelache 2013 – Helsinki, and the Media Art
Histories conference Renew – Riga, October 2013 were used to discuss work and taxonomies for Fields.
Rasa Smite and Raitis Smits are artists and founding directors of RIXC, an art institution in Riga, Latvia,
whose Art + Communication festival has become one of the most important festivals of this kind in Europe
and worldwide. Armin Medosch is a curator, writer and artist based in Vienna, Austria. The Fields exhibition
is a follow-up project to Waves 2006, which was also shown at Arsenals in Riga, co-curated by Smite, Smits
and Medosch.
From the 200 proposals received through the public call, the curators have chosen 40 works from all over the
world, but with a special focus on Central, Eastern and Northern Europe. Fields will be exhibited between
May 15th and August 3rd 2014, at the Arsenals exhibition space of Latvian National Arts Museum, the
largest and most important exhibition space for contemporary art in Riga, as a part of Riga – European
Culture Capital 2014. The exhibition will be accompanied by public lectures, Renewable Futures conference
as well as artist performances and concerts. A catalogue will be produced, which will consist of a special
issue of the Acoustic Space peer reviewed academic journal, jointly issued by Liepaja's University Art
Research Lab and RIXC.
The curators selected works that are considered to be contextual seedbeds for social change. The changing
role of art in society is one where it does not just create a new aesthetics but gets involved in patterns of
social, scientific, and technological transformations.
Fields presents a lively landscape of art that challenges existing viewpoints and deconstructs social issues,
but also proposes positive visions for the future. A premise behind this project was from the very start that no
single field and associated label can do justice any more to the diversity of contemporary art practices.
Typically, today, the most interesting practices are transdisciplinary and transformative - they rely on new
combinations of existing fields-as-in-disciplines, combining the artistic with the social and the natural, the
scientific and the emotional, the sensible with the actual.
Fields opens up the contemporary field for a free and associative play of radical taxonomies, remixing and
recombining existing categories, thereby carrying out important boundary work that gives a new shape to the
contact zones between art, science, technology and social engagement in the 21st century.
While the final list of artists may still change, we would like to present some examples for the radical diversity
of approaches:
The relationship with nature plays a major role in this exhibition, often in combination with ideas from
the open culture that emerged on the net, about sharing resources and tackling social issues through
participatory and social mechanisms.
In some cases, such as Leave it in the Ground by Oliver Ressler (2013), or Seedsunderground
(2013-14) by Shu Lea Cheang, the work carries a clear and direct political message, concerning issues such
as renewable energy, sustainability or the fight for the diversity of agricultural seeds and plants.
Other work, less overtly political, opens our senses and minds to new ways of seeing the world,
referring to what French philosopher Jaques Rancière calls the 'distribution of the sensible'. Lisa Jevbratt
shows how different reality is if we imagine to look at the world with animal eyes.
The Belgian collective Okno combines rooftop gardening and beehives to create new maps of the
distribution of plant life in cities. Erich Berger measures changes in the magnetic field of the Earth. Manu
Luksch offers a free ride on a water taxi in exchange for a conversation with Kayak Libre.
The human body itself becomes seen as a node in a complex network of force-fields, where nature,
genetic science and political and economical topics intersect. The Latvian artist Gints Gabrans proposes to
modify our bodies so that, with the help of new enzymes, we can eat grass and tree branches. Hu.M.C.C.-
Human Molecular Colonization Capacity project by Maja Smrekar, Slovenia, uses an enzyme from the artist's
body to create a yoghurt. Hans Scheirl's paintings and installation Transgenic (TM) breaks through barriers
between 2D and 3D, simultaneously opening up new ways of artistic and bodily trans-gression.
The intersection of social and visual fields is the topic of works by Austrian video artist AnnjaKrautgasser's Prelude (2010) and media artist Hannah Haslaati, Finland, who uses principles known from
Gestalt psychology to make group dynamics visible.
The intersection of the globalised economy with digital technologies, financial markets exploitative
labour practices and culture and concerns of local communities and indigenous people are addressed in
works such as Histoire Économique (2013) by British artist Hayley Newman, Working Life (2013) by Danish
artist collective Superflex and Eccentric Archive (2012-14) by Ines Doujak and John Barker.
The relevations by Edward Snowden about global surveillance activities of the USA through its
PRISM program has made evident how important the invisible world of data flows and data bases is. Data
fields, battlefields and the war on terror mark the background for works such as Endless War (2012-14) by
British-Japanese artist couple YoHa (Graham Harwood and Matsuko Yokokoji), and We should take nothing
for granted! - on the building of an alert and knowledgeable citizenry by Slovenian artist Marko Peljhan and
Project Atol.
The relationship between matter and information, as suggested by cybernetics pioneer Norbert
Wiener, is the topic of the Earth Computer (2014) Martin Howse and Ghostradio (2014) by Pamela Neuwirth,
Markus Decker and Franx Xaver.
Artists such as Martins Ratniks' installlation with 27 CRT TV screens, and French artist Cecile
Babiole's sound installation are engaging with the raw energy of electrical and electro-magnetic fields,
continuing work started with the Waves project in 2006.
Relationships between electrical and biological fields inform the work of Latvian sound artist
Voldemars Johansons, who, in collaboration with RIXC's own project Biotricity (bacteria battery) has made
music from electrical signal fluctations that are generated by living micro-organisms.
These are some key topics and examples of up to 40 works that will be shown at Fields.
Support: The Fields exhibition is supported by Riga 2014 and Riga City Council, Latvian State Cultural
Capital Foundation, Latvian Ministry of Culture, Austrian Ministry of Culture, French Cultural Institute, Nordic
Culture Point.
Image: Superflex. Working Life (2013)
Press and PR coordinator:
Elina Kempele – elina.kempele (at) rixc.lv
Press Conference: Thursday, May 15, 12:00
Opening and Reception: Thursday, May 15, 18:00. Arsenals Exhibition Hall, Torna iela 1 / Free entrance
Festival venues in Riga:
Arsenals Exhibition Hall
of the Latvian National Museum of Art (LNMA), Torna iela 1
Goethe Institute
Riga, Torna iela 1, entrance from Klostera iela
Spikeri Concert Hall
Maskavas iela 4/1
Lunch for festival participants (13.05 - 16.05) – Daily
Ratslaukums 1, Riga City Council (basement) - entrance from Rātes pasāža
Hotel Konventa Seta
Kaleju iela 9/11
Kolonna Hotel Riga
Tirgonu iela 9
Islande hotel
Kipsalas iela 20
RIXC office
Maskavas iela 10 (3rd floor)