Athanasios Argianas - Nick Laessing. Theyr works reflects the artist's interest in revisiting the past and their shared struggle to grasp expanding technological advancement as a means of communication. Science becomes sorcery where there could be slippage between fact and fiction. Curated by Milika Muritu.
Athanasios Argianas - Nick Laessing
curated by Milika Muritu
Cell Project Space continue their international programme by bringing
together two artists who although educated in London, now migrate
between 3 cities London, Berlin & Athens. They represent a growing
generation of artists who have moved to work in European cities that
have had struggling post war economies, where much of the rich
cultural history of the area has been left dormant and unchanged. The
work presented in ‘On Aether’ reflects the artist’s interest in
revisiting the past and their shared struggle to grasp expanding
technological advancement as a means of communication. For Nick
Laessing & Athanasios Argianas their work is part of a lo-fi
enlightenment, a programme of discovery via experimentation. Science
becomes sorcery where there could be slippage between fact and
fiction. Both artists work within a framework of proposal or
collaboration, which often creates a device for the layering of
authorship. Motion and Energy is claimed via strange and convoluted
hypothesis. Much of what is exposed is selected and carefully
prepared evidence inviting the audience to enter into the artists’
fiction.
In the past much of Athanasios Argianas’ installation works take the
form of furnishing, storage devices, and audio equipment to either
intervene or suggest intervention with the audience. He also invests
in clear allegorical depictions of early 19th century scientific
discoveries, such as August Ferdinand’s Möbius Strip; repeating
images of women’s hair braids and plaits in the structure and form of
various complex Möbius Strip patterns, painted in the style of the
romantic setting that the mathematical theory was discovered.
His new work created for the exhibition hovers between an unbound
book and a collection of prints which will be accompanied by text,
'On The Condition Of Music (Draw a Circle And Follow It)'.The work is
a project the artist has been working on for the past year and is
based on collected ideas for ‘unrealisable projects’ (works that
could only materialise as suggestions drawn on paper).
For his first exhibition at Cell Project Space Nick Laessing will
produce a film documenting the life of Viktor Grebennikov (died 2001)
who was a biologist at Novosibirsk State University Institute for
Agriculture. From an early age he became fascinated by insects and
throughout his life collected specimens of insect life, amassing a
huge collection. As a talented artist, environmentalist and inventor,
he made many studies of the insects in their landscape that became
his life long interest. A museum situated within the Institute for
Agriculture is dedicated to his work where his paintings, drawings
and scientific inventions are on display. Towards the end of his life
in 1995 Grebennikov wrote a book published in Russia called ‘My Life,
Victor Grebennikov’. In this book, which contains many of his
illustrations, he tells the story of his life and makes some
extraordinary claims. In 1988, while studying a certain insect he
chanced upon whilst collecting specimens, he claimed to have
discovered a phenomenon of biological anti-gravity or weightlessness.
Subsequently he constructed a small flying platform that utilised the
hitherto unknown power in the chitin (the exoskeleton of this
insect). Secretly experimenting with his mysterious new technology,
he made flights about the local countryside. He claimed to achieve
speeds of up to 25 km per second and could have gone much faster, but
for the flimsy construction of his device. Since his death, the
legacy of his story has developed myth-like proportions in Russia.
During Laessing’s trip to the city of Novosibirsk he met and
interviewed Grebennikov’s ex students, friends and colleagues and
visited the university and woodland habitats where he worked in an
attempt to create a portrait of the scientist and to find out more
about his claims.
This work is a continuation of Laessing’s previous interests in
unproven scientific phenomena, such as the work ‘Energy Generator’
Olivia Plender’s Top Ten ArtForum April 2006
‘Nick Laessing is currently searching for that holy grail of science:
the perpetual motion machine. The quest has led him to Switzerland
(where a religious cult claimed success), to scientific conferences,
and finally to his own studio—where he constructed a model on an
existing patent. Chronically underfunded, research into free energy
is the preserve of autodidacts and scientists on the margins,
recalling the ideological endeavors of “cranks” like Buckminster
Fuller and nineteenth-century amateur scientists, who made
significant discoveries (like electricity) before the scientific
community closed ranks against outsiders’.
In 2000 Argianas & Laessing collaborated on works at the Timothy
Taylor Gallery & in the publication ‘Guest Room’ in 2006. ‘On Aether’
will continue their collaborative spirit. Laessing exhibited in Mary
Mary, Glasgow in 2005 and was one of the founding artists of
Hobbypopmuseum.
In conjunction with this exhibition Athanasios Argianas will have his
first solo exhibition at Max Wigram Gallery and is represented by
Breeder Gallery, Athens. He took part in the group show 'Pale
Carnage', curated by Martin Clark at The Arnolfini, Bristol earlier
this year.
Private View Friday 27th April 2007 6.30-9.30pm
Cell Project Space
258 Cambridge Heath Road - London
Open Fri.-Sun. 12-6pm or by appointment
Free Admission