Ralf Ziervogel

February 25, 2008

in residency

Watermill Brooklyn Gallery is showing new work by Ralf Ziervogel, a fall 2008 Watermill Center artist-in-residence and a current Triangle artist in residence. Entitled MAWHISTLA, the piece is a multimedia installation about clichés of viewing.

Curated by Dmitry Komis

In a dark room, with a black floor arranged like ice floes lit only by black light, MAWHISTLA appears like a deranged laboratory. An arrangement of 32 drawings that presents a puzzling stream of letters (A+B+…Z) confounds the viewer and addresses language as a source of faith and superstition. Taking inspiration from ideas developed by logician Kurt Gödel, best known for his “incompleteness” theorems, Ziervogel presents an unfulfilled human-made pattern (stream of letters) to depict a system in the midst of perfunctory malfunction. By arranging the static forms as if codes in an axiomatic system, the installation creates inner-images which are then mirrored as if in a continuous proof destabilized by logic and reasoning.

infinite + infinite, 2009
62 Drawings,
ink on paper (four different papersize formats),
500 cm x 500 cm (each wall),

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Installationview: Young German Art (1 of 3 rooms), Galerie Arndt & Partner, Berlin, 2009

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{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

reuben matemane May 4, 2009 at 8:19 am

Creatively imaginative and thought provoking.Thanks and keep it up.

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