Jacob Korczynski
Doktorand
With a view to a later date, or never : Em Hedditch, Lili Huston-Herterich, Jean-Paul Kelly
Other contributions
- Jacob Korczynski
- Em Hedditch
- Lili Huston-Herterich
- Jean-Paul Kelly
Summary, in English
Bricolage has its origins in anthropology, with the bricoleur identified as someone who develops a practice via process, understanding their environs by using what is at hand. In an art historical context, bricolage has no single strategy, methodology, or trajectory. This exhibition identifies contemporary practices by Em Hedditch (1972, UK), Lili Huston-Herterich (1988, US), and Jean-Paul Kelly (1977, Canada).
The power of their projects rests not in the provenance of a unified medium or a single gesture. Instead, it is found in the accumulation of time and the potential for a practice imbricated with everyday life—situating the historical and social context of the bricoleur in relation to the viewer at the moment of encounter. For Hedditch, this includes making manifest via photos and found objects the demarcation of property boundaries that we both access and enforce each day. In close proximity to her home in Rotterdam, Huston-Herterich has sourced fibres from the detritus of the textile industry as the foundation for sculptures that are knotted or felted, thus marking the passage through multiple generations of hands. Finally, Kelly appropriates image documents we can instantly access electronically, interpreting and transforming what and how they depict. Here, through sculptural panels of perspex and rusted steel, he reshapes and hardens our gaze away from our screens and into other screens that fasten the flesh and choice of sight to material.
-Jacob Korczynski
The power of their projects rests not in the provenance of a unified medium or a single gesture. Instead, it is found in the accumulation of time and the potential for a practice imbricated with everyday life—situating the historical and social context of the bricoleur in relation to the viewer at the moment of encounter. For Hedditch, this includes making manifest via photos and found objects the demarcation of property boundaries that we both access and enforce each day. In close proximity to her home in Rotterdam, Huston-Herterich has sourced fibres from the detritus of the textile industry as the foundation for sculptures that are knotted or felted, thus marking the passage through multiple generations of hands. Finally, Kelly appropriates image documents we can instantly access electronically, interpreting and transforming what and how they depict. Here, through sculptural panels of perspex and rusted steel, he reshapes and hardens our gaze away from our screens and into other screens that fasten the flesh and choice of sight to material.
-Jacob Korczynski
Publiceringsår
2021-10-08
Språk
Engelska
Dokumenttyp
Utställning
Förlag
Badischer Kunstverein
Ämne
- Visual Arts
Aktiv
Published