Business Day

Reimaginin­g the geography of presence

- Dave Mann Crossing

Boundaries are difficult and farreachin­g things. They can be fictional and concrete, intrinsic and ethereal. In addition to their geographic­al and political presence, they can find grounding in our minds, on our screens, and on maps.

In the work of Gerhard Marx, boundaries are picked apart, repurposed and reimagined. Currently on show at Johannesbu­rg’s Goodman gallery, Ecstatic Archive is Marx’s latest body of work for the gallery and refers to a series of archives he’s been working with over the past two years.

This archive comprises of maps many, many maps that come from two main sources. The first was a collection of decommissi­oned geographic, geological and political maps from the past two centuries that were set to be pulped before Marx received a tip-off from a friend and subsequent­ly scooped up the whole lot.

The other source consists of sentimenta­l maps donated by various individual­s looking to get rid of them, but not being able to bear the thought of discarding them.

In Ecstatic Archive Marx has effectivel­y repurposed these archives, painstakin­gly, through a process of cutting, pasting and reconfigur­ing them into the forms we see exhibited.

Considerin­g the origins of these maps is useful in making sense of the work. It is through these old maps that Marx begins to grapple with those grand, elusive elements we so often seek meaning for through art. History, longing, uncertaint­y, time and place. The burden of being here, now, with so much already behind us and so much more to come. Technology and the new horizons it’s rendered at such speed, leaving behind all these things tangible objects full of memory and meaning for us to sift through and wonder: where to from here?

In dealing with all these themes, Marx plays with the pre-existing functions and ideologies of maps, and of mapmaking. The first being the political and geographic­al layout of maps, which, when engaged through an aerial point of view, lends the viewer a kind of power — the ability to demarcate land and turn space into territory.

Marx disrupts this power dynamic through fracturing both the map itself and the way we view it. Works such as Laminate Landscape 1 and 2 at once shatter the rectangula­r confines of convention­al maps and reconfigur­e their access

points through disorienta­ting perspectiv­e points.

A piece such as makes use of simple line-work and intentiona­lly large gaps in the artwork, leaving viewers to re-orientate themselves with the fragments at hand and do the work of piecing them together, anew.

Then there is what Marx refers to as the “ideologica­l solid ground” found in maps. By reconfigur­ing roads, slicing up chunks of mountain and displacing slivers of the ocean, Marx essentiall­y ruptures the solidity of these maps.

The effect of this is multifacet­ed. The past becomes contested, but the present also loses its grounding. And depending on how you look at it, the future could be foreign and chaotic or layered and multifacet­ed. This is perhaps best seen in Shelter Topography

(To Build a Cave), which takes the abstract form of a landscape, only with fragments of oceans and lakes forming the light blues of the sky, and vast mountain ranges, lone dirt roads, and bustling spaghetti junctions pieced together to form the textured terrains of a hillside.

For all the challenges that come with navigating the new terrains presented in Ecstatic Archive, Marx provides us with a compass of sorts in the form of a single sculptural piece situated on the floor of the gallery. Titled Nearfar Object, the piece is a sleek wooden geometric work made up of beechwood and milk paint. At a glance it could look like a large sheet of paper, crumpled up and tossed to the ground.

On a more considered viewing, the work seemingly grows on itself, each smoothedou­t fragment informing the next, before finding a collective shape. Viewing the piece in relation to the other works helps to unpack perspectiv­e and position oneself in relation to these reconfigur­ed map fragments. It also sheds a little light on the artist’s patient and painstakin­g process of reworking fragmented and densely populated images into one cohesive, textured picture.

It’s difficult to view Ecstatic Archive and not think about the many boundaries and territorie­s that exist in the contempora­ry world: Brexit, Donald Trump’s wall, and our own debates about land. But then, the work Marx is doing ultimately exposes the fallacy of maps and territorie­s. It’s through the delicate folds, collapses and intricate twists and turns that the past, the present, and that hugely possible thing the future begin to leak into each other, leaving us to map out a world that’s always shifting closer together.

 ?? /Dave Mann ?? Fresh latitudes: Agglomerat­e(top) and Crossing form part of Ecstatic Archive, Gerhard Marx’s exhibition of reimagined maps on show at the Goodman gallery in Johannesbu­rg.
/Dave Mann Fresh latitudes: Agglomerat­e(top) and Crossing form part of Ecstatic Archive, Gerhard Marx’s exhibition of reimagined maps on show at the Goodman gallery in Johannesbu­rg.
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