Hand Held Lava. Drawing on personal experience, the artist makes biographical connections to volcanic phenomena and examines parallels between geological and human life cycles. The exhibition juxtaposes new artworks in poetic relation with historical and geological artefacts. The Berlin Museum of Medical History of the Charite' simultaneously shows the exhibition: Ilana Halperin. Stones.
Curators:
Sara Barnes (Independent Curator, Berlin)
Andrew Patrizio (Professor of Scottish Visual Culture, University of Edinburgh)
Volcanic activity is never far from our minds or the world news. With her new solo exhibition Hand
Held Lava at the Ernst Schering Foundation’s Project Space opening on 2nd February 2012, the
Glasgow-based artist Ilana Halperin (b.1973, New York) looks deep into volcanic phenomena and the
interplay of life cycles between humans and volcanoes.
Hand Held Lava will focus upon the artist’s long-standing engagement with volcanoes, their
generation and life stories. Drawing on personal experience, Ilana Halperin makes biographical
connections to volcanic phenomena and examines parallels between geological and human life
cycles. The ejection of stony material, the generation of new landmass, the contrast of slow time and
fast time: Halperin employs geology as a language to conceive our understanding of time and our
relationship to a constantly evolving environment. The exhibition juxtaposes new artworks in poetic
relation with historical and geological artefacts. An early 19th century lava medallion with its
accompanying handwritten note (gifted to Alexander von Humboldt, a loan from the Museum für
Naturkunde, Berlin) and a series of newly commissioned works – drawings created with lava stamps
able to withstand temperatures of liquid magma at 1200 degrees – reflect upon the artist’s volcanic
sojourns and tell of the changeable nature of landmass, historical events and their interconnection to
human experience.
Halperin’s art practice combines fieldwork in diverse locations: Hawaii, Iceland, France, China, in
museums, archives and laboratories and develops in collaboration with geological specialists such as
The Global Volcanism Program, British Geological Survey and Earthwatch Institute. Her work has
featured in many significant exhibitions, and she has been the recipient of numerous awards. She has
recently been appointed the first Artist Fellow at the National Museum of Scotland, and as the Artist-
Curator of the geology collection of The Music Hall (the new Shrewsbury Museum) in the town of
Charles Darwin’s birth.
Running parallel to the artist’s exhibition at the Ernst Schering Foundation, a striking new solo
exhibition investigates the intersection between body stones and geology—new landmass formed
inside and outside the body. Steine (Stones) by Ilana Halperin at the Berlin Museum of Medical
History of the Charité draws inspiration from the connections between the body’s physical geology and
that of the Earth we inhabit. Inspired by the collection of body stones at the Museum, Halperin has
made a series of new works formed in the Blue Lagoon, Iceland. These will be shown together with
sculptures created in the petrifying springs of Fontaines Pétrifiantes de Saint-Nectaire in France, and
loans from Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin. Funded by the Ernst Schering Foundation, the exhibition
will provide fascinating new insights into body stones as artefacts and as geological phenomena.
Funded by the Ernst Schering Foundation the Berlin Museum of Medical History of the Charité
simultaneously shows the exhibition:
Ilana Halperin. Steine
Berliner Medizinhistorisches Museum der Charité
Charitéplatz 1 | 10117 Berlin
Kindly supported by Creative Scotland, British Council, and Blue Lagoon, Iceland.
Opening: January 26, 2012, 7 – 9 pm
Exhibition Duration: 27.01. – 15.07.2012
A publication featuring Halperin’s work and both exhibitions will be published in the spring. In English
and German, it will include essays by Gillian Beer, Cambridge, Hugh Tuffen, Lancaster, and Thomas
Schnalke, Berlin.
The artist will attend the press conference. After the press conference there will be the possibility to
take part in a guided tour through the exhibition “Ilana Halperin. Stones” at the Berlin Museum of
Medical History of the Charité. Afterwards, there will be offered a transfer to Ernst Schering
Foundation for visiting the exhibition “Hand Held Lava”.
Related Events:
Tuesday, February 7, 2012, 7 pm
A conversation between Ilana Halperin and Prof. Achim Brauer, Head of the Section “Climate
Dynamics and Landscape Evolution” at the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences in
Potsdam. Moderated by curator Sara Barnes.
Monday, March 12, 2012, 7 pm
“Hand Held Lava”, a film/performance event by Ilana Halperin, co-curator Prof. Andrew Patrizio and
New York anthropologist Karen Holmberg in an exploration of the intersections between geology,
archaeology, history, and the visual arts. The Performance Lecture “Hand Held Lava” was originally
commissioned by Triple Canopy and may be seen at www.canopycanopycanopy.com
Press and Public Relations
Friederike Petersen
Phone +49-30-20 62 29 66
Fax +49-30-20 62 29 61
petersen@scheringstiftung.de
Opening: Thursday, February 2, 2012, at 7 p.m.
Ernst Schering Foundation
Unter den Linden 32-34 10117 Berlin
Monday through Saturday: 11 a.m. – 6 p.m.
Free admission