berlin: NATURE
For his first solo exhibition NATURE in Berlin, Lou Jaworski opens a space oscillating between material and cultural memory, the subconscious and post-minimalist forms. At the center of the installation is the figure of a superhumanly large Pinocchio made from nine 3D-printed sculptural components. Jaworski‘s version is a digital appropriation of the literary figure. In the 3D printing process, the individual parts are produced separately, which is reflected in the spatial installation. However, the fragments are mentally assembled into a complete, recognizable body. In its effect, the figure is at once uncanny and lifeless, as well as playful. Personifying the lie, it questions the independence of narratives, but also, through its material aesthetics, the trustworthiness of new technological developments. NUMBERS (2024) not only challenges conventional proportions, but connects to the cosmic whole through the eyes of the headpiece made of meteorite slices.
In the exhibition, Jaworski‘s examination of pictorial traditions and digital perception of space is illustrated by his UV pigment prints on semi-transparent stainless steel mesh AEON 001–003 (2024). These works explore the relationship between image and content, implying a transition to digital landscapes through pixel-like surfaces. Against a black background and in dramatic colors reminiscent of the chiaroscuro technique of Italian painting, digitally rendered cloud formations emerge, seeming to float like holograms in the pictorial space. When viewed from close, the structure of the image appears to be abstract and synthetic, while from a distance it appears as a unified whole. Similarly, a cloud is created by many small particles briefly merging into one ephemeral body. Both the cloud motif and the format suggest a landscape which is in the process of dissolution, almost demonstrating a dematerialization of the image-carrying medium.
For SIKHOTE ALIN (2015), Jaworski also worked with an iron meteorite, which he pulverized and used as pigment for the silkscreen. The work depicts the invoice the artist received when he purchased the meteorite, indicating the value of the cosmic stone. The invoice was printed until the meteorite dust was used up, resulting in a conceptual work of 12 sheets. At the same time, it is a reflection on the value of artistic labor and our relationship to nature, as well as the claims of ownership associated with it.
Lou Jaworski‘s work often pushes the limits and metaphorical meanings of materials. For LA NOTTE VERTIVAL REMIX (2024), he cut thin cylinders of serpentino verde and installed them on the wall like neon tubes. In this way, the solid materiality of serpentinite, with its high iron content, takes on the fragile connotations of glass. However, the deep dark color of the Italian stone contrasts with the usual bright light source, suggesting an association with a black light tube. The 120 cm long rods also reveal the material memory of the stone, like samples from geological cores. In addition, the vertical arrangement of the two tubes, installed one on top of the other, creates the impression of a column and draws attention to the surrounding architecture, which is affected by the work.
The exhibition is accompanied by an exhibition text by curator and art historian Philipp Lange.
max goelitz
rudi-dutschke-strasse 26
10969 berlin
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