"Conductivity" Exhibition

Location One

poster for "Conductivity" Exhibition

This event has ended.

Location One presents Conductivity, an exhibition presenting different perceptions of time and space, featuring works by Ana Freitas, Michaela Müller, and Tommy Støckel, and a dance performance by Andrea Yugoslavia Chirinos. The opening reception will take place on Wednesday, June 28, from 6–8pm, with Chirinos’s dance performances scheduled for 7pm and 7:30pm. An additional event on Thursday, June 29, at 7pm, will feature artist Ana Freitas in conversation with scientist Brian Schwartz.

Conductivity looks at how these artists explore distinct ideas of time from a variety of perspectives—systemic, scientific, phenomenological, and experiential. The artists approach time as both transitory and universal, a force that continuously shifts our experience of the environment. Their works act as energy conduits, either evoking a sense of rapid flow through chaotic images and implied movement or conveying a sense of timeless quietude through a systemic and controlled composition. Time is not experienced sequentially or chronologically, but as a prolonged, directionless presence. The works on view abandon the idea of time as random and haphazard in favor of construction, concentration, and intention; although the works are themselves site-specific and temporal, they explore the timeless and constant quality of duration.

In the animated installation Location Scouting: Airport, Swiss artist Michaela Müller uses airports as a paradigm for the highly standardized communication of global societies. Her film animations have no specific narrative. Her figures melt into an endless flow of moving images. Müller’s hyper-meticulous animation technique, which involves hand-painting each individual frame on glass, gives her films a lush, textured quality that emphasizes the vibrancy of color, the rhythm of brushstrokes, and the gravity, liquidity, and luminosity of paint. Location Scouting is a visual inquiry into the "painted" location of a film animation. Her accompanying installation, called Trial and Error, illuminates facets of her unique process.

Danish artist Tommy Støckel’s installation Structured Studio Situation (New York) is a sculptural arrangement of approximately 1,500 objects placed directly on the gallery floor, according to a carefully planned composition. The display is based on the repetition of randomly placed elements. Through the replication of a single unit, Støckel creates a tight structure that shifts from an identical pattern into multiple compositions generating a variety of structural possibilities. His work plays with issues of scale, seriality, and repeated randomness—a study in controlled environment and organized chaos. Støckel’s sculptural installation for Conductivity, created during his residency at Location One, has the exact dimensions of the artist’s studio floor. It aggregates items accumulated by the artist in his studio and objects collected nearby in SoHo, from sculptural models to found materials like chopsticks and Styrofoam cups.

Ana Freitas’s photogram series Dialogue about Time started with an inquiry: What is the nature of time? The work is based on an intense dialogue about time between the artist and cosmologist Mário Novello. The interdisciplinary encounter of arts and science is currently at the center of her artistic investigations. In this cacophonic dialogue, Freitas tries to visually represent a panoply of complex issues related to time and space. Her attempt to illustrate the nature of time based on a scientific discourse underscores the distance between these two worlds, since one language can never be fully translated into the other. Her photograms—photographic images without the use of the camera--are a visual conduit for issues related to the gravitational field, fluidity, matter, cosmic structures, geometry, continuum space, constant movement, density, and endless flow. They hint at the poetic notion of time and space as pure imagination, with its imprecision and endless interpretations. Ana's residency is made possible by the Ministry of Culture of the Brazilian Government, Portas Vilaseca Gallery in Rio de Janeiro.

Andrea Yugoslavia Chirinos is a dancer and choreographer based in Mexico City and New York. Her work is influenced by the visual arts, dance, photography, and human attitudes and gestures. Chirinos uses movement to create nonlinear narratives that allow the viewer to experience their own perception of time, focusing on images, sensations, and emotional states. In her dance performance Everything Expires, she explores non-narrative, fragmented perception and distorted lapses of time, combining such disparate elements as humor, movement, and theatrical characters. Everything Expires borrows elements from the Japanese artist Daido Moriyama, a photographer who takes pictures in the Tokyo district of Shinjuku, recording reality but never trying to create a perfect image. Like Moriyama, Chirinos appropriates the raw power of reality, engaging in energetic movement as a gesture of internal desire. In her dance performance, the photographer and her assistant conduct a bodily dialogue about memory and time-related issues.

Media

Schedule

from June 28, 2012 to July 28, 2012

Opening Reception on 2012-06-28 from 18:00 to 20:00

  • Facebook

    Reviews

    All content on this site is © their respective owner(s).
    New York Art Beat (2008) - About - Contact - Privacy - Terms of Use