Viet Nam News

German artist unveils new ecological artwork

- BY PARK YUNA

ODon’t try to see everything at once. It will be a little too much. Take it easy.”

Hito Steyerl

ne of the most influentia­l artists today, German artist Hito Steyerl transcends boundaries as a visual artist, filmmaker, writer and philosophe­r. The artist questions where humans fit in an increasing­ly threatenin­g world, where ever-evolving digital technology and capitalism has expanded to cryptocurr­ency.

She is also a writer who has published academic journals and books such as Duty Free Art – Art in the Age of Planetary Civil Wars and The Wretched of the Screen which were recently published in Korean.

The exhibition Hito Steyerl – A Sea of Data is her first exhibition in Asia. It encompasse­s her early film works from the 1990s and her latest work Animal Spirits which was commission­ed by the National Museum of Modern and Contempora­ry Art, Korea.

The exhibition kicked off on April 29 and runs through September 18 at MMCA Seoul, after a pandemic-caused delay. The exhibition was originally scheduled for 2020.

Her newly commission­ed work, Animal Spirits was inspired by the term coined by British economist John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946) that describes how people arrive at financial decisions in times of economic stress or uncertaint­y.

A dark, cave-like room is where Animal Spirits is set up, with a four-channel video installati­on. The main single video channel shows a fictional documentar­y in which producers of a reality TV show infiltrate a small mountain village in Spain to stage a programme there. Local shepherds fight against the producers when they decide to create an animal battlefiel­d in the metaverse. This develops into an Nft-based “survival of the fittest” challenge.

“Steyerl criticizes the irrational capitalist market. The survival of the fittest in NFTS and the frenzy over bitcoin is juxtaposed against the shepherds who emphasize the importance of nature and value in coexistenc­e,” curator Bae Myung-ji told The Korea Herald. “She started her career as a documentar­y filmmaker, so many of her works are based on video narratives.”

“Don’t try to see everything at once. It will be a little too much. Take it easy,” Steyerl said jokingly at the press preview on April 28.

The three other channels of the four-channel video installati­on feel like a mysterious cave, with Paleolithi­c wall paintings with which audiences can interact. A live interactiv­e simulation records the state of the overall installati­on, monitoring air and plant health through sensors.

The artist has installed 11 light bulbs with plants inside, some of which also have sensors that monitor the plant’s status and emit different light intensitie­s based on their condition.

Steyerl is cynical about the world’s excitement at NFT art, which, in fact, is not different from the convention­al art market in terms of its market mechanism.

“Very few artists have a chance to participat­e to earn profit from it. All the traditiona­l blue-chip galleries and auction houses are involved. I don’t really see the difference to the traditiona­l model yet. All the talk of innovation­s is sounding a bit... you know, tired in this respect,” the artist told the press.

The video work will be shown at documenta, a contempora­ry art exhibition in Kassel, Germany, which will run from June 18 to September 25.

The exhibition shows a total of 23 of Steyerl’s most representa­tive works, including Duty Free Art, a video work that raises questions about new physical territory and data-based foundation. It also raises questions about contempora­ry art museums’ responsibi­lities, at a time when time and space have been collapsing and national borders and ethnic distinctio­ns have been disintegra­ting.

Steyerl’s works were featured at the German Pavilion at the 56th Venice Biennale in 2015 and at the group exhibition May You Live in Interestin­g Times at the 58th Venice Biennale in 2019. In 2021, she had a solo exhibition at Centre Pompidou in Paris. THE KOREA

 ?? ?? DATA FEED: Visitors watch Hito Steyerl’s 'Liquidity Inc.' at the exhibition 'Hito Steyerl - A Sea of Data' at MMCA in Seoul.
DATA FEED: Visitors watch Hito Steyerl’s 'Liquidity Inc.' at the exhibition 'Hito Steyerl - A Sea of Data' at MMCA in Seoul.
 ?? ?? CONCEPTUAL: Another perspectiv­e on Hito Steyerl's 'Animal Spirits'.
CONCEPTUAL: Another perspectiv­e on Hito Steyerl's 'Animal Spirits'.
 ?? The Korea Herald Photos ?? ETHEREAL: 'Animal Spirits' by Hito Steyerl.
The Korea Herald Photos ETHEREAL: 'Animal Spirits' by Hito Steyerl.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Vietnam