SZCZECIN.- Born in Haifa in 1975, Ratman established himself as one of the leading international video artists with The Workshop, his acclaimed 5-channel video installation shown at the Israeli national pavilion in the 2013 Venice Biennale. His exhibition in
TRAFO Center for Contemporary Art is comprised of four large video installations spanning 6 years of creation, 588 Project (2009), Multipillory (2010) and two new ones Five Bands from Romania (2015) and Swarm (2015).
More than an exhibition of 4 separate and self-contained works, the scale and simultaneity of the works installed over 4 floors of TRAFO create a single installation reflecting physical and topographical layers within the exhibition. As a whole, the show addresses issues of contemporaneity and the human condition in front of changing political and technological realities.
For Five Bands from Romania (2011-2015), Ratman invited Heavy Metal bands to bury their amplifiers in the ground in an empty field and play a single piece of music together. In this project Ratmans explores the culture of Heavy Metal and its role in reflecting the political changes in Eastern Europe at the beginning of the 90s. The work is experienced by the viewer in two different dimensions: a fairly silent open space, and a full descriptive sound inside a sound-room whose sculptural presence dominates the floor. Five Bands creates a unique feedback system that addresses issues of compression, identity and territory as well as notions of community forming.
Similar issues in the relation of nature and human connectivity are present also in the two-channel installation, 588 Project (2009) where unrecognizable figures seem to emerge from under a pool of mud. The work was based on a long research Ratman did on yet another subculture that of mud submersion fetishism. These unidentified heads are not struggling to surface, but rather seem to float in an existential pool.
While the fetish of submission feeds off of the participant's free will, the submission of free will is the subject of the 2010 work Multipillory, another work populated by dissected heads. Based on a classical medieval torture instrument, the mechanism consists of a complex pillory and a video that combines cruelty and humiliation with the humour of absurdity. Trapped in difficult body positions, the heads of the participants project through the pillory structure which acts as both an object and video projection at the same time. Their body tension predicts the expectation of the end of the film, which, however, is never reached due to the never-ending loop of the video. The punishment inflicted on the participants is that they are doomed to remain a collective image in the world, rather than individuals.
The exhibition in TRAFO also premieres Ratmans most recent work, the multi-channel video installation Swarm (2015). A pack of micro- drones circulate inside a deserted structure, moving from one room to another. The drones fly with no purpose, yet seem to operate with a clear finality. The structure, made out of white Styrofoam, is a cross between a model and an actual space. Its soundless environment is controlled by the nonstop buzz of the electric drones, but as the structure containing them begins to fall apart, the drone operators appear in glimpses, revealing the system and the scale of the work. Adapted specially for TRAFOs basement, Swarm explores ideas of swarm behavior, Individuality and control and will recreate the experience of the videos as a trompe loeil hinting at a fragmented spatiality in which the drones operate.
Ratmans installations are artworks, which cannot be viewed but must be somehow entered; environments whose subjects become relative to the observer by means of exposure with the whole body. Acclaimed for precisely this narrative and visual complexity in his work The Workshop at the Venice Biennale in 2013, Ratmans exhibition in TRAFO is his first large scale institutional solo exhibition in Europe. The inter-disciplinary working methods of the artist correspond with the spatial and conceptual profile of TRAFO and raises questions about the transformation and identity of the human condition in our time.
The exhibition has been curated by Sergio Edelsztein, Director and Chief Curator of the Center for Contemporary Art in Tel Aviv.