Super User

Sunday, 27 August 2023 12:13

Outcome

A good 300 artefacts will finally try to assert themselves there. Goal-oriented, some will make their way into a shortlist through strategy and cooperation. This way they have the chance to be one of the 2 works selected by a jury of fellow players. One goal has been achieved! They will become and remain part of the ever-expanding EPOFAKT Museum.

Tuesday, 29 November 2022 11:48

Open questions

Reproductions of the human facial skin formed from self-produced substances are laid out in various two-dimensional forms. What do we actually see in and on someone’s face? How are three dimensions reduced to two? How unquestioned must our habit of seeing be? Will this new kind of portrait change our perception of ourselves?

Tuesday, 29 November 2022 11:30

Idea

In times of self-reflection in a flood of digital images, above all selfies, the portrait takes on a new importance. It remains a medium of re/presentation. However, often only
for the fleeting moment, it remains accessible to everyone in the cloud for years.

Using aesthetic means, my work has for years revolved around questions of our fleeting memory storage, of the thrown-in, scratched-in, of drawings as spontaneous creations that satisfy the moment but are actually intended for eternity. The artistic stance, a sketch by Leonardo da Vinci, for example, which refers to the author, confirming his identity, is a process that Occidental visual arts have known since the Renaissance at the latest.

What does it mean when this process is applied to school desks, to windows on public transport systems, to monuments and structures such as the Great Wall of China? Does it reflect an aestheticisation of everyday life or does it imply that everyone is an artist? Why does a material trace have to be accompanied by a selfie for the Internet? This phenomenon is not tied to social class or education.

The President of the Republic of Slovenia is just as happy when, on the occasion of the Biennial of Graphic Art in Ljubljana, he is allowed to scratch something into one of my glass guestbooks, as the museum director in Bremen or the homeless person who has travelled all the way to Kassel for the documenta. And what about the selfie for social media? We feel that it is in flux and feel no power over whether and how it is disappears into the ocean of bits and bytes.

In my EPOFAKT gameplay staging, some 300 small images are created within two to three hours: three survive in a fictitious museum.
In DeskXistance, a global study, the scratchings and scarification of over 300 school desk table tops, created over years by pupils during their lessons, are turned into prints.
In Existentmale, likewise a global study, the windows of underground trains scratched by youths are turned into prints.
And in Wandmale – Stigmata, attempts to create an individual existence through name carving at cultural-historical sites are recorded by means of frottage.

Protelics will provide a better alternative to what seems to me a desperate attempt to become visible in the crowd, be it through physical inscriptions or selfies posted on Facebook. One can create one’s portrait with one’s own skin or through one’s face, with its corporeal marks of life. The self is already there – it only has to be transferred to be immediately present in the image.

In this portrait, the protagonist is not interpreted by the “artist’s hand”: the experimental arrangement and the process of portraiture are the artefact. The sitter will simply be present through his or her own proteins. But not just any proteins. They don’t trace the physiognomy of the face. They are not mimetic, but were – before the filter paper was applied, the actual epidermis of the face, its protective skin.

Portrait painting and photography are two-dimensional. A human face is three-dimensional. A healthy skin is full of life: sweat, fats, proteins, and bacteria.

At the latest since the Renaissance, our visual habit of facial recognition is taken for granted and hardly raises the question as to what we are actually recognising. We can usually assign the face to a specific person. This process is confirmed and reinforced by digitised facial recognition and biometric data. Despite 3-D models, any representation on the screen remains two-dimensional.
Why should the distance between the eyes and the length of the nose be more important and more interesting to me as a counterpart than all the stories told by the skin?

Tuesday, 29 November 2022 11:16

Outcome

Following locations have so far become part of the Wandmale – Stigmata project:
2004–2008 China: Great Wall; Temple of Heaven, Beijing; various pavilions, Hutong Xidan and Zhongshan Hutong
2006: Cuba: Bus stop shelters and Camelito metro-buses, Havana
2007: Egypt, House wall, city centre, Cairo
2018–2019, Brazil: Ruins of the Spanish colonial Jesuit reduction, São Miguel das Missões; indigenous inscriptions Urubici, Ivorá, and Cavernas Gaúchas
2019: Columbia: Ciudad Perdida (Teyuna)
2021: Greece: Temple, Samothraki

Tuesday, 29 November 2022 11:13

Process

Surface structures of walls and stones are transferred onto paper or fabric using crayons and pencils, but mostly by means of a Chinese tampon technique acquired in the Palace Museum in Beijing. Often, a traditional silk specifically developed for East Asian calligraphy serves as the image support. Size and colour are adapted to on-site conditions.
The choice of location and of the specific visual excerpt is subjective. It is however based on information collected from what has been communicated by people. A prerequisite is that it should be recognisable as an analogue memory store.

Tuesday, 29 November 2022 11:10

Idea

„This is how one pictures the angel of history. His face is turned toward the past. Where we perceive a chain of events, he sees one single catastrophe that keeps piling ruin upon ruin and hurls it in front of his feet.” (Walter Benjamin)

Structures, stones, and their inscriptions have long been landmarks for the geographical, spiritual and intellectual orientation of local inhabitants and travellers alike.

Many historical ruins have become must sees and symbols of the tourism industry. Individuals lost in the masses tend to perpetuate themselves in the stones. They are trying to confirm their existence. It is like an attempt to be seen in the dust of the rubble, to discover oneself among thousands of others. The probability of finding one’s name years later in that one same place is very small. But the knowledge that a trace of oneself is attached to something permanent as an addition to a long-lasting memory store is reassuring – a phenomenon that transcends cultures.

The project follows an open concept. Neither is there a fixed selection of cultural sites to be visited, nor do the walls have to be ennobled as cultural sites. In the case of listed monuments, some tough negotiations with the authorities are an integral part of the project.

Tuesday, 29 November 2022 10:56

Open questions

Are zeros and ones making the world more two-dimensional?

Tuesday, 29 November 2022 09:29

Open questions

Tuesday, 29 November 2022 09:19

Open questions

How long are cattle perceived as living creatures and when do they become meat in the supply chain? Killing in the meat supply chain is the job of a slaughterhouse.

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