http://www.e-flux.com/announcements/transformism/
Left: Revital Cohen, "Kingyo Kingdom"
(video still), 2012. Photo: Cohen Van Balen. Right: Melanie Jackson, "The
Urpflanze (Part 2)" (still), 2012. Commissioned by The Arts Catalyst.
Transformism – two new commissions
by Melanie Jackson and Revital Cohen
22 January–9 March 2013
John Hansard Gallery
University of Southampton
University Road, Southampton
Hampshire SO17 1BJ, UK
Hours: Tuesday–Friday 11–5pm, Saturday 11–4pm
T + 44 (0) 23 8059 2158
info@hansardgallery.org.uk
www.hansardgallery.org.uk
www.artscatalyst.org
Transformism, an exhibition of two new works by
Melanie Jackson and Revital Cohen, has been commissioned by The Arts Catalyst.
Both artists through their distinctive practices have made new works exploring
their interests in how cultural archetypes and ideas interweave science and
technology to create new shapes, visual forms and structures.
As we develop the tools to manipulate and
engineer new forms and systems of life, the exhibition considers our historical
and contemporary entanglements with nature, technology and the economy, and how
these relationships influence emergent forms in biological and synthetic
matter, through new sculpture, installation and moving image works.
The Urpflanze (Part 2) is the second part of Melanie
Jackson's ongoing investigation into mutability and transformation that takes
its lead from Goethe's concept of an imaginary primal plant, the Urpflanze,
that contained coiled up within it the potential to unfurl all possible future
forms. Contemporary science likewise imagines the potential to grow or print
any form we can imagine, by recasting physical, chemical and biological
function as a substrate that can be programmed into being. Jackson's work
begins in the botanical garden and looks to the laboratory, from clay pits to
the factory floor, from analogue to digital clay, from its own animated pixels
to the interior of the screen in a series of moving image works and ceramic
sculptures. She has collaborated with Esther Leslie on a text that has informed
the work and a new publication, THE UR-PHENOMENON, that will be
distributed as part of the exhibition.
In Kingyo Kingdom, Revital Cohen,
whose projects often test the ethical parameters of biological design, explores
the genus of fish that have been designed for aesthetic purposes, questioning
the definitions used to indicate living creatures. Does one denominate a
manipulated organism as an object, product, animal or pet? What consequences
does this entail for our feelings and behaviours? Cohen's interest in the
cultural perceptions and aesthetics of animal-as-product took her to Japan,
where exotic goldfish have been developed over centuries of meticulous
cultivation, breeding out dorsal fins and sculpting kimono-like Ranchu fish
tails. Kingyo Kingdom explores the unique culture of breeders,
collectors and connoisseurs with footage from the Japanese national goldfish
competition, questioning the design and commodification of this species.
An illustrated exhibition guide with an essay by
Isobel Harbison will be available in print and as an eBook.
Saturday 26 January
12–2pm Private view
2–4pm Crafting Life: Materiality, Science and Technology symposium
Melanie Jackson's The Urpflanze (Part 2)
will be exhibited at Flat Time House, 210 Bellenden Road, London SE15 4BW, UK,
28 March–12 May 2013
Revital Cohen's continuing project will be
exhibited later in the year.
Details of both will be posted on www.artscatalyst.org
[...]
Friday, January 25, 2013
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