Futura
Prague
Holeckova 49
+42 (0)604 738390
WEB
Two Exhibitions
dal 1/4/2015 al 9/5/2015

Segnalato da

Michal Novotny



 
calendario eventi  :: 




1/4/2015

Two Exhibitions

Futura, Prague

Sources go dark. In the works presented in the show, strategy appears as a subject of investigation and at the same time a methodological and operational tool. Honza Zamojski presents Four Eggs Theory.


comunicato stampa

Sources go dark
curator: Silvia Franceschini a Valerio Borgonuovo

The exhibition springs for a vision of political reality as an intricate system of agents and agencies where information, events and narratives intersect and function, often eluding our efforts to understand them. This image of complexity could easily describe the sensations of an individual faced with everyday reality and news. Rare, revealing glimpses into hidden financial structures, disclosures of global surveillance or evidence of geopolitical rivalry only reinforce the impression of the presence of impenetrable but rational strategies unfolding, concealed from public view and general awareness. The exhibition Sources Go Dark[1] questions policies behind the logic of secrecy and withdrawal, transparency and truth, image and cultural production, and draws upon possible strategies employed in contemporary art production.

The notion of strategy – central for the exhibition – came into general use from the language of military theory, to indicate a high-level plan to achieve goals under conditions of uncertainty. It is now applied to different fields of social activity, including (not least of all) art practice. The exhibition asks a question: how can we exercise cognitive faculties in the face of the uncertainty of the modern world?

In the works presented in the show, strategy appears as a subject of investigation and at the same time a methodological and operational tool. Visual culture and its role in mass communication is analysed through materials of the 1990s, the first decade of consolidation of global systems in trade, war and circulation of images. The chronological horizons of the exhibition expand to reach the present, with highlights of rituals and mechanisms of power that exists on the thresholds of public and private space, in the Western and Middle Eastern worlds. Current conventions of testimony of events, visual and audible regimens of truth and their relationship to disciplinary or military technology are examined with forensic approaches. The position of the artist as a strategist of the art world is reflected through the politics of authorship based on delegation of responsibility to the subject of investigation and absence of the active producer.

The exhibition also attempts to grant space to narratives excluded from historical memory, and to represent subjective visions of a potential social and environmental collapse. By connecting blind spots of history and dystopian expectations, the exhibition tries to redefine its key concept of strategy as an intelligible pattern in a stream of decisions that is shaping the future, and to extend critical awareness by providing alternative visions of current reality.

----

Honza Zamojski: Four Eggs Theory

In an ideal world an ideal egg would be an ideally oval geometrical form with an ideally spherical yolk center surrounded by whites. After boiling our specimen and cutting it crossways, we would see a microscale model of the Earth's orbit around the Sun. Both systems – the cosmic one and
the human one – are closed and complementary, as the vitality of one of the parts depends on the other. Meanwhile, the space between the surface of the yolk and the shell, on a cosmic scale, is the sphere of influence between our planet its closest star. In the “Four Eggs Theory”1 the key element of illustrations is a synthetic image of half an egg – a closed system with a core and a surrounding atmosphere. This theory aims to describe an individual, though also, from a wider perspective, the cyclical and recurring process of the artistic creation of a Work. The Work is the key element of artistic Practice. At the same time, the theory described in the following text could be analyzed through an illustrating diagram. If we were to seek an analogy in our common knowledge, we ought to ask: Which came first, the chicken or the egg?

The process of making something, or, generally speaking, Work, can be divided into two parallel zones – thinking zone and effect zone. These, in turn, also divide into symmetrical departments. The sphere of cognitive reflection, or Inspiration, is everything a creatively working person apprehends through the senses: sight, touch, smell, hearing, and taste. The sphere of non-cognitive reflection, Intuition, which some would call the soul, and others instinct, is difficult to explain, sometimes irrational, and in some cases, misleading. The zone of effect, on the other hand, mirrors the thinking zone, and is also divided in two: a material part and an ephemeral part. The material effect is the Item, the thing available to the senses. With the cyclical recreation of the creation cycle, the Item can become Inspiration. The result which is intangible and unknowable is the Idea, but one which is in no way verbalized or materialized, a thing we sometimes call a “sign of the times.” The four parts of both the spheres are marked by colors, inspired by depictions of the visible color spectrum. Intuition is black (a color beyond the model that shows visible light), Inspiration is cobalt, Idea is yellow, the color of the Sun, and Item is red, a heated lump of coal.

For the Work cycle to take place, there must be interaction between the thinking zone and the effect zone. Much as with the division into two zones, this interaction is dual. It can occur in a way that is exclusively cognitive, as Rationalization, or strictly physical, as Creation. At the moment when both processes intersect, a rare but extraordinarily necessary moment happens – the Point of Satisfaction. This appears much before the ready Idea or Item, because after crossing the line that divides the sphere of reflection from the sphere of effect there is pure execution of ideas.

If I were to apply the Four Eggs Theory back upon itself, it essentially would look as follows: I have an intuitive need (Intuition) to structure the world of matter (Item) and ideas (Idea) around me, and this is why, inspired (Inspiration) by the theoretical ponderings of writers, poets, and artists,
as well as various artifacts, I think constantly about how to (Idea) communicate my knowledge in
a logical manner, e.g. through writing this text (Item). All this comes together to make the Work, which is part of a greater whole – a Practice.

Image Sources go dark

Press Contact:
Michal Novotný, michal@futuraproject.cz

Opening: April 2nd 7 PM

Futura
Holečkova 49
150 00 Praha 5

Opening Hours:
Wednesday - Sunday, 11am – 6pm - during temporary exhibitions

IN ARCHIVIO [20]
Two exhibitions
dal 6/7/2015 al 26/9/2015

Attiva la tua LINEA DIRETTA con questa sede