Kunstraum Dornbirn presents the exhibition "on/" by the Austrian artist Judith Fegerl
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, December 22, 2024


Kunstraum Dornbirn presents the exhibition "on/" by the Austrian artist Judith Fegerl
Installation view. Photo: Guenter Richard Wett.



DORNBIRN.- The exhibition “on/” by the Austrian artist Judith Fegerl has symbiotically merged with and switched on Kunstraum Dornbirn. Electricity flows. For Fegerl’s works, however, the electricity comes not from the socket as usual but from a solar power plant on the south side of the exhibition space that was specially designed and installed for the exhibition – a reference steeped in history, since the former assembly hall of the Rüsch Works built in 1893 constructed turbines for the first hydroelectric power plants.

The rededication of the raw industrial architecture from a production facility to a room for the presentation and communication of visual art resulted in more than a unique exhibition space that makes the creation of site-specific art particularly appealing. Fegerl is fundamentally interested in what is addressed here in a rudimentary way and otherwise given little attention: How does the art and exhibition industry work? What infrastructure is in place and does this infrastructure meet the minimum requirements? How fragile, vulnerable and efficient is it? How does the climate, the position of the sun or darkness affect the exhibited works and their perceptibility?

Fegerl works with the entire building, interweaving its past and present, intervening in its substance and including significant functional elements. Her work critically examines institutions’ efforts to attain sustainability and the possibilities of keeping in touch with the times through infrastructural changes. This approach treats not only the individual institution but also the overarching cultural-political system.

Thus placing a 40 m2 photovoltaic system in the Dornbirn Municipal Gardens, that is, in public space, seems only logical. In this way, Fegerl makes visible normally invisible processes of energy generation in the exhibition context and integrates them as formal, aesthetic and conceptual factors in the artistic concept.

Inside the exhibition space, an open door provides a view of the back of the solar installation. The inverter, battery storage and distribution box are prominently mounted, staging the power lines running loosely along the floor between the objects in the exhibition and their appropriate energy supply. There are five slightly inclined steel stelae with a diameter of about 30 centimetres and a height of three metres. Each stele is divided into two unequal sections that are connected by a copper-coloured element. This element is a very strong electromagnet that holds the two steel elements together. The position and orientation of the stelae are based on the five historic slewing cranes, to which the stelae are loosely connected by a steel cable.

For the first time, Fegerl combines objects from the “moment” series, which has been ongoing since 2016, with a solar system. Here her artistic work comes full circle in demonstrating the existential dependency of work and energy in a targeted and almost techno-poetic way. The stelae hold together only until the power supply is interrupted. If that happens, the individual components simply fall apart (still secured by the steel cable on the slewing cranes). The instability of the construction is dramatized by the inclination of the massive steel tubes and generates a perceptible tension. An essential part of the work, the tension bespeaks the dependence and availability of energy.




The title “moment” integrates the situational experience on several levels: the temporary connection of the steel elements and the contrast of massive materiality with fragile arrangements. Directly broached seems to be the comprehensive concept of contemporaneity – and this connects inherent processes of the art system and challenges to it with social reality, such as localising the production and exhibition situation in the here and now referring to socio-political and socio-cultural structures.

The series of stelae is complemented by a wall sculpture that bridges the gap to the outside space. The modular composition “last light” shows various surfaces and materials of solar panels that are subject to repeated optimisations in the course of technical development and as such to a predetermined expiry date. In the oversized collage, this becomes visible in the respective formal design of the modules whose production times range from the 70s to today. The transformation of the panels into an artistic artefact consummates the alienation from their actual function. The panels still produce electricity, but the energy is no longer used; it remains as an invisible, circulating potential within the structures. The visual force of the work arises from the different textures and architectures of the modules and their combination.

Displayed on the rear walls of the assembly hall is a picture from Fegerl’s series “solar series of electric shocks” (with the subtitle “long hours”). In this series, Fegerl continues her preoccupation with energy as a material and imaging factor in both form and media. The 160 x 97 cm stainless steel panels, whose dimensions are reminiscent of standard solar panels, are electroplated with copper; this galvanic process is controlled and fed by solar energy from the photovoltaic system in Fegerl’s studio. The artist leaves the composition of the work to the weather and light conditions, which shape the canvas as if in a painterly process. The exhibited work was created in January 2023.

The alternative state that the respect-inspiring stelae of “moment” only hint at is achieved in a thoroughly meditative dynamics by the work “profound understanding”. An electric hoist mounted on the hall’s transverse crane lowers an electromagnet onto a pile of iron granulates. The magnet is activated and slowly pulled up again, separating a mass of granules attracted by electromagnetic forces from the rest of the pile. If the power supply is interrupted after a while, the form caused by magnetic energy collapses and falls back onto the pile on the floor. What is otherwise invisible and formless – electromagnetism – becomes a form-creating force in Fegerl’s artistic practice and sculpture a dynamic reflection of energy and time, activation and passivity, giving and taking.

With the delicate wall object “capture”, Fegerl once again shows the conditions of production required by her work with electricity. At the invitation of the AIT Austrian Institute of Technology, she was able to carry out experiments in its High Energy Laboratory and direct huge surges of electricity to smash into a bed of sand. The intense surge and great heat generated cause the sand to melt and solidify into organic-looking shapes. The fragile forms were then cast in synthetic resin for stabilisation and “short-circuited” with a steel clamp.

The Dornbirn exhibition displays the multimedia spectrum of Fegerl’s artistic work in a finely attuned spatial setting. The exploration of the possibilities of electrical energy as sculptural and imaging material provokes a reflection on the availability and handling of resources. Fegerl’s fascination with time-based, transformative processes of forces and materials opens up an experimental space. The linking of an aesthetic of the functional with the autonomy of art makes a contribution to the current debates on exhibition practices and their responsibilities and possibilities, but it is also a commentary on a general social attitude in our increasingly complex present: “You can’t see it, you can’t hear it, and to a certain extent you can’t feel it either. Nevertheless, electrical energy is the basis of our modern, technologized life: progress and development, utility and luxury, but also conflicts over distribution, provision and, above all, environmental issues – energy is highly political stuff.” (Judith Fegerl)

Judith Fegerl was born in 1977 in Vienna, where she lives and works today. She graduated from the Visual Media Design and Digital Art programme at the University of Applied Arts in Vienna, studying with Karel Dudesek, Thomas Fürstner and Peter Weibel (diploma 2004). At the same time she also studied Art and New Media at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna with Peter Kogler and Birgit Jürgenssen (diploma 2006). In 2019, Fegerl received the Media Art Prize of the City of Vienna, and she was recently awarded the Dagmar Chobot Sculpture Prize 2022.

A catalogue accompanies the exhibition.










Today's News

June 2, 2023

London's Apollo Art Auctions offers connoisseur's selection of antiquities, June 10-11

Kunstraum Dornbirn presents the exhibition "on/" by the Austrian artist Judith Fegerl

Was Queen's 'Bohemian Rhapsody' originally 'Mongolian Rhapsody'?

Artist Nicolas Party debuts a pastel mural at Frick Madison

'Balancing Act' by artists Jennifer Marman and Daniel Borins now on view at Cristin Tierney Gallery

George Rickey in Schwante: Sculpture Park Schlossgut Schwante shows solo exhibition

ARCOlisboa successfully concludes its most international edition

Alighiero e Boetti Regola e Regolarsi opening at Ben Brown Fine Arts

Break Easy solo exhibition by Kim Bartelt now on view in Milan

History of the New at The Fine Art Society in new summer exhibition

Helmut Newton Foundation in Berlin opens ALICE SPRINGS. RETROSPECTIVE

Mario Schifano: il nuovo immaginario now opening at Gallerie d'Italia

Mary Quant: Fashion Revolutionary now open at Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum

Solo exhibition Garage Stills & Fringe Nature by Jacquie Maria Wessels, Musée de la Photographie Charleroi

Lisa Milroy: Correspondence now opening at Kate MacGarry's

Rare artworks by icons and Andy Warhol, David Bowie, Lawren Harris and others at Cowley Abbot

Exhibition walkthrough – Maki Na Kamura for Gallery Weekend

Margaret Mitchell: An Ordinary Eden illustrates society's failure to support our fellow humans

Almine Rech now represents the Estate of Jean Miotte

Wedgwood announces new Creative Director Alice Bastin with launch into Web 3

"Merlin James & Victoria Morton Double Shuffle" opens at Kerlin Gallery

Abbot Hall reopens with Julie Brook's 'What is it That Will Last?'

Woody De Othello joins Stephen Friedman Gallery

Louise Fedotov-Clements appointed the new Director of Photoworks

Dominating the Rift: Discover the Best Place to League of Legends Accounts Buy at HappySmurf.com

Exploring the Incorporation of Keychains in Architecture

Go With Your Gut: Why Probiotics Are Essential at Every Age

8 Key Characteristics of a Successful Company Logo

YouTube Vanced APK Download Latest Version 2023

The Top Israeli Hit Maker Who Is Invading The Global Music Scene

How to Track a Cell Phone Using a Monitoring App?

Camping Gear - Why Are They Worthy of a Comfortable Camping Set-up?

How To Choose The Perfect Immigration Consultant




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful