Datumsoria: The Return of the Real opened on September 8 at ZKM | Center for Art and Media in Karlsruhe, and will be on view till March 18 2018. The exhibition is co-presented by Chronus Art Center, ZKM | Center for Art and Media, Nam June Paik Art Center and CAFA Art Museum.

As the second edition of a series of exhibitions under the auspices of the “Art&Tech@” research program conceived and curated by ZHANG Ga, Datumsoria: The Return of the Real is a significantly expanded version of the eponymous exhibition previously mounted at Chronus Art Center, which has commissioned two works by Chinese artists LIU Xiaodong and YAN Lei with support from Lisson Gallery and Beijing ZONHOM Cultural Development Co., Ltd.

The exhibition publication features an extensive essay by ZHANG Ga, elucidating the concept of the real in the information age and the works in the exhibition.

The exhibition will travel to Nam June Paik Art Center and CAFA  Art Museum subsequently.

 

 

Datumsoria: The Return of the Real
2017.9.9 – 2018.3.18
ZKM | Center for Art and Media (Germany)

Curated by ZHANG Ga

Artists
Ralf Baecker, Laurent Grasso, George Legrady, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Carsten Nicolai, Nam June Paik, LIU Xiaodong, YAN Lei, ZHANG Peili, WANG Yuyang

Co-presented by
Chronus Art Center (Shanghai)
ZKM | Center for Art and Media (Karlsruhe)
Nam June Paik Art Center (Seoul)
CAFA Art Museum (Beijing)

▲ ZKM | Center for Art and Media

▲ Press conference and preview on September 7

▲ Opening speech on September 8: ZHANG Ga (Curator), CHEN Ping (Counsellor for Cultural Affairs, Chinese Embassy in Germany), Frank Mentrup (Mayor of the City of Karlsruhe), Peter Weibel (CEO | ZKM)

▲ Group photo of some guests

▲ Exhibition view on September 8

▲ Curator ZHANG Ga being interviewed


▲  LIU Xiaodong presenting his work

▲  Laurent Grasso: Monolith

▲ YAN Lei: RÊVERIE Reset, commissioned by "Art&Tech@"

▲ LIU Xiaodong: Weight of Insomnia, commissioned by "Art&Tech@"

▲ Carsten Nicolai: unitape

▲ George Legrady: Voice of Sisyphus

▲ Ralf Baecker: Mirage

▲ ZHANG Peili: Landscape with Spherical Architecture

▲  Rafael Lozano-Hemmer: Please Empty Your Pockets

▲ WANG Yuyang: Quarterly

▲ Nam June Paik: Internet Dream

▲ Artist talk on September 9

 

Foreword
ZHANG Ga

 

An upright slab of monolith shines, radiating prismatic shades of hues from the outer space; an unidentifiable thing of many elements suspends in the air, a live tree grows out of the torso of this mammoth being. Below which is erected a colossal metal tower studded with 80 screens, large and small, rotating and churning out images and words, cognizant of audiences who pass by, then destroying the traces. Three large canvases flank behind those creatures, spiderlike robots busily stroking on the linens, over time the blankness will be saturated by the traces of BMW assembly lines and the trajectories of traffics at the Brandenburg Tor in Berlin and an anonymous rotary in Karlsruhe.

The above encounter unveils the exhibition Datumsoria: The Return of the Real. A neologism concocted from datum and sensoria, Datumsoria denotes a new perceptual space immanent to the information age.

In Monolith, Laurent Grasso recreates cosmic luminosity in a 3.5-meter tall sculpture modeled after his awe-striking light installation SolarWind at Calcia silos in Paris’ 13th arrondissement. Monolith employs an algorithm that responds in real time to a variety of solar data and translates them into luminous and chromatic variations of colors and lights. Here a cosmic mythology mingles data with fiction, tangibility and ephemerality.

RÊVERIE Reset is a system which takes YAN Lei's deconstruction of imagery to a new dimension. 80 computer-driven display screens of diverse sizes, mounted onto a colossal cylindrical structure, wipe out images uploaded by visitors and render visual information as textual interpretation first by averaging the image’s color and making it monochromatic and then, based on the machine's whimsical reasoning of it, narrating what the content of the image was prior to its destruction. Truth or falsity is both relevant and unfounded just as a machine’s daydream can be as contemplative as aleatory.

Behind these two works unfolds LIU Xiaodong’s monumental Weight of Insomnia. Pushing past the boundaries of his documentary style of live painting, the artist reinvents himself by penetrating the digital now. In this ZKM installation, three locations were carefully identified and equipped with video cameras. Three large-scale canvases are mounted on crude construction scaffolds. A robotically controlled paintbrush jitteringly translates the three discrete, incoming datum captured by video cameras into contours of buildings, silhouettes of trees, outlines of vehicles, and shadows of human figures. It is as if the robot, reincarnated in a human consciousness, wrestles through an endless, restless insomnia to piece together an ever-evolving jigsaw of amorphous desires and anxieties, fleeting nightmares and ruptures.

If Weight of Insomnia becomes an obscurely affective object of desire through the revitalization of generic data input, Carsten Nicolai’s unitape is an examination of perception and visual structures that allude to punch cards of the early computing era. unitape’s immaculate images and sounds are pure mathematical precision that illuminate an algorithmic sublime.

Voice of Sisyphus, a study by George Legrady of a single photograph realized as a continuous performing audiovisual composition, projects an austere sharpness in the Cagean tradition. It is the computational rigor that creates picture sound and sound picture all at once.

Ralf Baecker’s Mirage generates a projection of synthesized landscape that predicates on the apparatus’ own perception through an earth sensing device. Revealing constant shifting of the "hallucination" of the earth the projection resembles a subliminal wandering through a machine sub-consciousness.

In Zhang Peili’s Landscape with Spherical Architecture perception undergoes a certain uncertainty through the digital intermediary. An array of thirty-six screens of still landscape images can be activated by the viewer horizontally or vertically. The work conjures a space where time does not elapse but instead expands which blurs the object and the subject, rendering them interchangeable in a specific point in movement.

Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s Please Empty Your Pockets elicits a disquieting reality in which memorabilia is preserved as precious human memory at the same time as information aggregated for consumption and profit. A memex machine no longer innocent.

The mammoth thing hovering in the air is the work Quarterly, an instance of many of works under the auspices of WANG Yuyang# which is a software suite conceived as the artist’s equal. Through numerous and distinct iterations WYY# has constructed a paradigm by which intelligence and creativity are no longer a human privilege only, breaching the anthropocentric taxonomy of orders. In reversing the creative operation from the human artist to the otherwise subservient tool-being of the machine, WYY# has not only offered us a wealth of stunningly novel forms in sculpture, painting and performance, but also forced us to think a new a world in which the perception of the real can no longer be reduced to that of human consciousness alone, a reality wherein the production of knowledge becomes a reciprocal conviviality between subject and object.

Nam June Paik had dreamed the dream of internet in 1994 in his great video wall installation. If only his electronic superhighway were a romantic signpost and symbolic gesture of what was yet to come for real. Datumsoria attests, unmistakably, the formidable presence of a planetary membrane of the network that has forever changed the rules of the game, in work and play, in politics and economics.

Datumsoria brings ten highly idiosyncratic works together, shedding new light upon relations that bespeak the logic of the Real of the information age, a reality predicated on binary instructions of the generic, of the uniformity of the Ones and the Zeros, from whose generality comes forth of a hardening of shapes and forms, precipitating sentient residues and invoking emotive potentials. Datumsoria signals that the politics of the real no longer only lies in the sphere of the “actual bodies and social sites recognized in the form of the traumatic and abject subject” (Hal Foster) as the predominant subject of contemporary experience and object of artistic inquiry but also alludes to how grasping this new reality of bits and bytes is as ethically imperative as it is epistemologically fundamental.

 

About “Art&Tech@”

Datumsoria: The Return of the Real is an outcome of “Art&Tech@,” a program initiated at Chronus Art Center and conceived by ZHANG Ga, which aims, through resuscitating the valuable legacy of experiments in art and technology from the mid-20th century, to come to terms with the challenges of a technologically constructed timespace. “Art&Tech@” has successfully completed two commissions by Chinese artists LIU Xiaodong and YAN Lei respectively. The outcome of which is being exhibited in conjunction with other international artists at CAC, ZKM | Center for Art and Media, Nam June Paik Art Center and CAFA Art Museum.

 

About ZKM | Center for Art and Media

As a cultural institution, the Center for Art and Media (ZKM) in Karlsruhe holds a unique position in the world. It responds to the rapid developments in information technology and today's changing social structures. Its work combines production and research, exhibitions and events, coordination and documentation. For the development of interdisciplinary projects and promotion of international collaborations, the Center for Art and Media has manifold resources at its disposal: the Museum of Contemporary Art, the Media Museum, the Institute for Visual Media, the Institute for Music and Acoustics and the Institute for Media, Education, and Economics.

http://zkm.de/

 

Supported by

 

 

Artist Talk
Talk Lithium Battery Before Talking Tesla

Artist: ZHANG Jin
Date: 2017.9.23 Saturday
Time: 15.30 – 17.00
Language: Chinese
Location: Chronus Art Center
Address: No.18, No.50 Mo Gan Shan Rd, Shanghai

 

To reserve a seat, please click here.

 

Tesla's Model S 85 is an all-electric car first introduced in 2012. Highly lauded for its sustainability and safety ratings, its production ended in 2016 in pursuit of new models within the S class. Fueled by a battery pack containing 7104 lithium-ion battery cells, one operating hour uses 85 watts electricity, which according to artist Zhang Jin, is equal to one month the power consumption of his studio.

How can a piece of artistic work be developed based on such a detail? ZHANG Jin will introduce his recent work Talk Lithium Battery First by showing his research approach and working process, as well as his personal experiences in research and creation practices.

Research/creation (R/C) is a field of knowledge based production emerging from the increasing number of artist-researchers pursuing investigations in creative fields within academic settings. It is the core concept of the CAC Research and Creation Fellowship program. R/C integrates art practice with scientific methods in experiments leading to the conception and production of works of art. It disrupts the traditional artistic mind-set based on individual and emotional expressions while emphasizing research and inquiry (in both cultural and technological terms) as the basis and prerequisite for contemporary artistic practice. R/C encourages trans-disciplinary work, collaboration, and collective thinking as the production mode, working to enrich the creative process, while generating new academic knowledge.

 

About the Artist

ZHANG Jin (b. 1978, Sichuan) resides in Chengdu. He received his BS & MS in Chemistry at the University of Science and Technology of China in 2004, and a PHD of Chemistry at Polytechnic Institute of New York University in 2007. ZHANG Jin combines photography, installation and video, exploring the alternative possibility of image production. He spent four years walking the ancient Silk Road, seeking the remaining monuments of civilization and cultural continuity. Based on the methodology of chemical experiments, he has devoted himself to experiments in contemporary iconography.

ZHANG Jin’s work has been exhibited internationally in art centers and galleries, including White Rabbit Gallery in Australia, Luxelakes A4 Art Museum, and Three Shadows Photography Art Center. His work Another Season received the Three Shadows Photography Award in 2012.

[dis][locate]

A <CAC_Lab> Presentation

2017.9.16 – 2017.10.22

Artists
Andrej Boleslavský, Daniel Franke, GUO Cheng, Samuel Adam Swope and R&D projects directed by Fito Segrera

Chronus Art Center (CAC)
BLDG.18, No.50 Moganshan RD., Shanghai

Opening Reception
9.16 Saturday, 4 - 7 p.m. (Guided tour: 4.30 p.m.)

 

Chronus Art Center (CAC) is pleased to announce [dis][locate], an exhibition presented by <CAC_LAB>. Dislocation implies the disturbance of a conventional state, space, object or idea. A subject is dislocated when its medium or body is substituted for another object or pushed to its physical or psychological limits. An object is dislocated when its original shape or purpose is transmuted. Dislocation, as a phenomenological term, suggests confusion and disorientation, it exhorts a form of detachment and reattachment; it renders an unexpected movement of sensory data on the screen of consciousness.

[dis][locate] offers a re-evaluation of our basic understanding of the mind and perception. The featured works make available a series of encounters that challenge established norms about the nature of reality.

Andrej Boleslavský's Hide&Seek proposes an environment of mixed natures, a digital space where humans can hide their physical bodies from each other. Combining elements from gaming experiences and virtual reality, the project exerts a form of confusion over the user, a disrupting experience oscillating between the physical and the digital. GUO Cheng's Breathing Restraint highlights how the interaction between humans and technological objects or systems can be, at times, disturbing. GUO's work is constantly disarticulating the most basic biological function of a human body, breath. Based on the topology of networks and how packets of information get lost, the system limits the fluidity of the user's breathing recursively until he/she is unable to do so.

Hide & Seek, Andrej Boleslavský, 2017, VR/MR, 6m×6m×3m

Breathing Restraint, GUO Cheng, 2016, Mixed Media, 35x30x20cm

In a similar fashion, by drawing attention to objects rather than subjects, Samuel A. Swope's Ecotone launders out our conventional notions of what nature means today. Using aerial robotics, Swope dislocates the technology by hybridizing it with natural elements, giving birth to a new creature with an intelligence of its own. Daniel Franke's work, Abstract History Machine, draws unusual parallels between geological and historical time. The work re-maps geological processes into a machine which expresses the evolutionary aspects of technological devices while highlighting the nonlinearity of history itself.

Abstract History Machine (Research Version), Daniel Franke, 2016, Mixed Media, 5m×3m

Ecotone, Samuel Adam Swope, 2017, Dried wheat, fans, mist, light, plants, quadcopter electronics, speakers, projection backdrop, video, 2m x 4m x 3m

As candid examples of CAC's experimental program "Art&Techology@"(A&T@) and in resonance with [dis][locate], we find the documentation of Weight of Insomnia by LIU Xiaodong and Rêverie Reset by YAN Lei. The former is an investigation on telematics, robotics and computer vision-engendered painting, a piece which takes, in real-time, the human dynamics of one space and relocates it into another while changing and abstracting its original form. LIU Xiaodong not only disrupts the idea of space but he also questions the role of the artist in the act of creation. YAN Lei's project uses cutting edge artificial neural networks and image captioning systems and creates a large scale dynamic sculpture capable of dissolving images submitted in real-time by the audience, into concepts. Therein YAN Lei highlights the irrelevance of the image and the artificiality of representation.

A&T@ commission - LIU Xiaodong: Weight of Insomnia, LIU Xiaodong's manuscript

All of the artworks exhibited are the result of a practice-based research process. Most of the projects were realized as part of CAC's Research and Creation Fellowship program and a few others were executed entirely or partially at <CAC_LAB>, a space dedicated to the inquiries about art, design, science and technology and their impact on global contemporary culture and society. Through artistic practice, technological development and research methodology, <CAC_LAB> seeks to enable creative processes that result in works of art of high production and aesthetic value. <CAC_LAB> is a space of flux which encourages artistic practice as a generator of new knowledge, a territory where art and science and technology converge into an experimental field of interdisciplinary research; free from dominant cultural establishments, technological overload and economical biases.

 

More info about <CAC_LAB>:

lab.chronusartcenter.org

 

About "Art&Techology@"

"Art&Techology@"(A&T@) is a program initiated at Chronus Art Center and conceived by ZHANG Ga, which aims, through resuscitating the valuable legacy of experiments in art and technology from the mid-20th century, to come to terms with the challenges of a technologically constructed timespace. “A&T@” has successfully completed two commissions by Chinese artists LIU Xiaodong and YAN Lei respectively. The outcome of which is being exhibited in conjunction with other internationalartists at CAC, ZKM | Center for Art and Media, Nam June Paik Art Center and CAFA Art Museum.

As the second edition of a series of exhibitions under the auspices of the "A&T@", Datumsoria: The Return of the Real will be on view from September 9, 2017 till March 18, 2018 at ZKM | Center for Art and Media in Karlsruhe: