Oliver Laric
Join us for a solo show by Berlin, Germany-based artist Oliver Laric. Laric
is known for diffusing the boundaries between technological, legal,
archaeological and artistic fields through different media like sculpture and
video. In his research-oriented practice, Laric evinces the layers of mediation
between a sculpture, a story or an image, and the subsequent versions it
generates as it is digested in time, perception and economy.
Since anyone with a smartphone has become an accelerated source of image
production, distribution and alteration, the questions posed by the artist about
the futility of authorship are increasingly urgent. Laric鈥檚 claim that we
understand visual culture as something unstable, continuously under construction
and ever negotiating between the human and the non-human, challenges most fields
in contemporary life.
The exhibition is a specific reading of Laric鈥檚 recent video work. In the
first part of the Experimental Gallery, there are two synchronized videos,
projecting updated cuts of his "Versions" videos on opposite walls. "Versions"
is an ongoing essayistic project that juxtaposes recurrent and recirculated
image sequences working as vignettes in combination with the voice-over of an
actress emulating the robotic sound of text-to-speech software. In her
narration, the voice uses extracts from texts by Henry James, Gertrude Stein,
Jorge Luis Borges, Bruce Lee and James Brown, by way of Lyn Collins, Rob Base
and DJ E-Z Rock. The second part of the gallery features an updated cut of
"Untitled," perhaps Laric鈥檚 most iconic work to date. In this video, Laric draws
on animation from different times to create a concatenation of morphing
characters, body parts, furniture, monsters and so on. The animation sequence is
interrupted by 3-D modeled anthropomorphic machines and tools, and occasionally
images that are being digitally constructed. The soundtrack, specifically
designed for the piece, oscillates from melancholic piano compositions to low
frequency buzzing notes to complete each vignette.
For Laric, there is no definitive means of categorization or purity in the realm of images, since most of the time we encounter incarnations of the precursor before we experience the source. He rather advocates for the understanding of image production as something that is fluid and a constant negotiation between producers, regulators and consumers.
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Join us for a solo show by Berlin, Germany-based artist Oliver Laric. Laric
is known for diffusing the boundaries between technological, legal,
archaeological and artistic fields through different media like sculpture and
video. In his research-oriented practice, Laric evinces the layers of mediation
between a sculpture, a story or an image, and the subsequent versions it
generates as it is digested in time, perception and economy.
Since anyone with a smartphone has become an accelerated source of image
production, distribution and alteration, the questions posed by the artist about
the futility of authorship are increasingly urgent. Laric鈥檚 claim that we
understand visual culture as something unstable, continuously under construction
and ever negotiating between the human and the non-human, challenges most fields
in contemporary life.
The exhibition is a specific reading of Laric鈥檚 recent video work. In the
first part of the Experimental Gallery, there are two synchronized videos,
projecting updated cuts of his "Versions" videos on opposite walls. "Versions"
is an ongoing essayistic project that juxtaposes recurrent and recirculated
image sequences working as vignettes in combination with the voice-over of an
actress emulating the robotic sound of text-to-speech software. In her
narration, the voice uses extracts from texts by Henry James, Gertrude Stein,
Jorge Luis Borges, Bruce Lee and James Brown, by way of Lyn Collins, Rob Base
and DJ E-Z Rock. The second part of the gallery features an updated cut of
"Untitled," perhaps Laric鈥檚 most iconic work to date. In this video, Laric draws
on animation from different times to create a concatenation of morphing
characters, body parts, furniture, monsters and so on. The animation sequence is
interrupted by 3-D modeled anthropomorphic machines and tools, and occasionally
images that are being digitally constructed. The soundtrack, specifically
designed for the piece, oscillates from melancholic piano compositions to low
frequency buzzing notes to complete each vignette.
For Laric, there is no definitive means of categorization or purity in the realm of images, since most of the time we encounter incarnations of the precursor before we experience the source. He rather advocates for the understanding of image production as something that is fluid and a constant negotiation between producers, regulators and consumers.
Artists on show
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