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Veli Silver,
Imagine, 2009
IMAGINE !
April
7
– 30, 2010
You are kindly invited to attend the
opening
of the exhibition Imagine! on
Wednesday , 7 April at 8 pm at
Galerija Škuc.
Artists:
Mirko
Bratuša,
Ana Čigon, Zmago Lenárdič, Veli
Silver, Sašo Vrabič.
Curators:
Polona
Lovšin
and
Božidar Zrinski
Guided tour
of the exhibition guided by curators
Polona Lovšin and Božidar Zrinski will
take place on Wednesday, 14 April
and Friday 23 April at 6 pm.
The exhibion is part of
Local Talk series.
Veli Silver drew the word
imagine upside down on the top of the
Israeli security fence. The inversion of
the word challenges us to think about
how it would be if it were written
correctly. Suddenly, the wall would no
longer be a barrier, but would hang as a
memory or a bizarre architectural
element above free passageway. A bitter
illusion, realistic expectation, or
merely a visual adventure? That depends
on the instruments which influence our
imagination, thinking, interpretation
and representation in general.
Today’s imagery is almost completely
subject to consumer ideology, while the
process of representation is held in the
tight grasp of its goals. The incessant
pounding of a multitude of visual
impressions constantly pushes us into a
carefully constructed and defined
future, completely blocking the
contemplation of reality. We live in a
world of banal, shallow and veiled
perspectives on our apparent wishes and
needs. What is the image of actuality,
which is increasingly disappearing like
a ghost instead of becoming stronger in
our consciousness as reality?
Artistic presentation rejects
instantaneous seduction, banality and
manipulation (as an effect), and defies
the rapid and elusive passage of time
with various procedures, although it
seems that the life-span of art works is
also being reduced to mere presentation
and the moment. Therefore, the
exhibition Imagine! does not seek to
present the latest production, but
reveals different artistic practices and
procedures. It confronts the works of
Veli Silver, Mirko Bratuša, Ana Čigon,
Sašo Vrabič and Zmago Lenardič as
credible witnesses of the present, which
do not embellish it, but show it as it
is.
Veli Silver’s graffiti may not exist
anymore, but photographs still reveal
them as witty and critical images which
metaphorically break one of the most
recognisable contemporary symbols of
separation. A heart built of bricks, a
pyramid, and messages written in huge
letters saying Imagine, New York Times
and David Copperfield was here are not
marketing labels, but cynical
illustrations of the cruel realities of
those completely separated by the wall.
An unusual group wrapped in pieces of
cloth and with halos under their arms
glorifies hedonism and the fulfilment of
wishes and needs in a relaxed state of
leisure. These are, as Javier Fuentes
Feo once wrote, the saints of high
capitalism, post-bourgeois
pleasure-seekers in a bored and glutted
society, or the children of nihilism and
being for nothing more but sheer
existence. Mirko Bratuša manages to
present the burlesque of our time;
anonymous saints, those who enjoy
superficial consumer society, are a
mockery of values embedded in society.
The video by Ana Čigon is marked by a
simple, formally pure, convincing and
unforced dramaturgy. Scenes showing the
successful breaking of commas are
sequenced in a uniform rhythm until – to
the surprise of the audience – one comma
breaks. At this key moment, the
narrative stops and freezes in the
message: this is a natural, defiant
posture. A simple metaphor which offers
an eternal and everlasting truth without
flirtation or deception.
Socialising with friends, chatting while
drinking coffee, playing with children,
and portraits of intimates make up
Vrabič’s diary notes in pencil, where
words are replaced by visual impressions
on a piece of paper or gallery wall.
Sašo Vrabič enjoys the simple image of
the everyday and ensures that this
apparent banality does not slip past us.
In a special way, his art promotes the
wish to be what we are, and not what we
could or should be.
Fireworks paraphrased in a video model
of a rhythmic performance of Bach’s
Kleine Präludien, a picture of a
schematic or frozen image of a falling
star, and a drawing of Chinese
eavesdropping could each be perceived as
an individual visual entity, but Zmago
Lenárdič places them in a coordinated
dialogical relationship. The viewer is
thus prompted to engage his/her own
powers of visualisation, transform the
variety of resulting experiences into a
single one and thus reveal that which is
concealed. This very paradox is typical
of the contemporary mode of perception –
we look, but we just do not see.
The
programme of Škuc Gallery is supported
by Ministry of
Culture of the Republic of Slovenia
and
Cultural Department of the City of
Ljubljana.
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