- Liddy Scheffknecht
Transcription
- Liddy Scheffknecht
LIDDY SCHEFFKNECHT Using black masking tape a distorted chair has been „painted“ on a window. The shadow of the drawing is casted into the room and moves over the floor within a time periode of several hours. At a certain point in time the shadow connects with a chair inside the room, as if they belong together. Lapse, 2011, installation, outside view Lapse, 2011, sunlight, shadow, tape, chair, dimensions variable 2:15 pm 2:39 pm 3:05 pm 3:30 pm 3:53 pm 4:19 pm 4:45 pm 5:10 pm 5:35 pm A window has been covered with white paper. A precisely constucted hole in form of an ellipse has been cut out. When the sun shines, an oval light spot appears on the floor of the room. At 5.01 pm the light spot becomes circular and reaches the position directly under the lamp, creating the illusion of a swichted on lamp. Just for a very short moment during the day the installation is „correct“. Every other moment it seems that the lamp has lost control over its flare. Oculus, installation view, 2011 3:12 pm 4:25 pm 5:01 pm 5:25 pm 5:54 pm 6:25 pm Oculus, 2011, sunlight, paper, lamp, dimensions variable Untitled (aim), Untitled (throw), Untitled (slide), wax crayon on paper, à 70 x 50 cm spot, 2013, light box, 65 x 100 cm exhibition view spot, Sotheby‘s Artist Quarterly, Vienna, 2013 oculus (Czerningasse), 2012, light box, 100 x 65 cm crop, 2013, installation, sunlight, shadow, paper, plant, dimensions variable crop, 2013, installation, sunlight, shadow, paper, plant, dimensions variable exhibition view, Georg Kargl Box, Vienna 2011 Walter Moser: A Moving Standstill - Liddy Scheffknecht’s Media Hybrids When it comes to photography, movement and standstill are two characteristics that are usually treated as a contradiction. As a cut through space and time, the photographic medium not only arrests a moment, it also stages that moment in an image, statically and enduringly. Photography “embalms time”: with this –still today one of the most famous descriptions of the phenomenon – André Bazin sought to understand its distinction from a different medium: film. Film goes beyond photography, for it adds the very element that defines the limits of photography: the definition of a temporal sequence by way of movement. On first glance, Liddy Scheffknecht’s work 7 Minutes 13 Seconds clearly corresponds to the characteristics of photography: static, immobile, and staged in an enduring fashion, a photographer operates before the outside wall of a building on the shutter release button of a stereo camera placed on a tripod. The photograph was not taken by the artist herself, but is a visual product made by an anonymous photographer that Scheffknecht appropriated, enlarged, and recontextualized. The discursive strategy of media appropriation serves to visualize the aforementioned differences between photography and film. This is made concretely visible in an elementary motif: the video of a shadow is precisely projected onto the photograph, and the referent of this shadow seems to be the photographer depicted. In so doing, the shadow reveals an important characteristic that goes beyond the photographic medium: movement. It slowly moves across the image and by way of its changing shape not only visualizes a temporal sequence, but also mixes photography and film. In this superimposition of two visual levels, Scheffknecht generates a media hybrid, whereby the limits separating the two media are both violated and visualized as transparent. Accordingly, the semantics of the image need to be sought in the difference between the two media. (...) The dialectic between static and movement is underscored in the video projection onto the photograph by divorcing the shadow from its referent and/or the photographer. On first glance, its continuously changing shape seems not to be an “imprint” or the result of the photographer, but rather suggests an invisible light source. On closer examination, this proves to be an illusion: the shape of the shadow can thus not be explained as a logical visual transformation, but due to its autonomous form the shadow separates itself from the causality of its reference, and thus emerges as an independent “double”. As the only mobile element, it dominates the statistic elements and divorces itself from the narrative context. The photograph’s proximity to reality as well as the course of the shadow, which initially appears to be logical, yet ultimately cannot be traced back to the photographer, makes Scheffknecht’s work slip into the uncanny-surreal. By way of conclusion, if a silhouette appears in Scheffknecht’s picture that no longer possesses any referent in the photograph itself, it includes an additional authority addressed by the camera of the photographer: the viewer. As a perceiving authority, he or she is thus inscribed as the midpoint between model and depiction, reproduction and construction, just as between photographic “reality” and its restaging in film. 33´´ 1´ 16´´ 2´ 13´´ 2´ 59´´ 4´ 02´´ 4´ 35´´ 5´ 27´´ 6´ 08´´ 7 minutes 13 seconds, 2011, video projection on photography, video 7‘13‘‚ pigment print 100 x 133 cm, videoprojector, mediaplayer 1/250, 2006/2011, video projection on photography video 11´20´´, c-print 148,5 x 198 cm, video projector, computer This work shows two computer-animated shadows projected onto the photograph of two people. The animation and the photography are so precisely synchronized that they can barely be perceived as seperate entities, and are therefore seen as a single unity of shadow and person. The work probes the borders between photography and video and contrasts the brief exposure time (1/250) against the long duration of the video. exhibition view 1/250, Kunsthaus Graz, 2012 6 minutes 38 seconds, video projection on photography, 2009 computer, c-print 90 x 120 cm, video 6‘ 38‘‘ 19´´ 1´ 22´´ 3´ 08´´ 4´ 19´´ 5´ 11´´ 5´ 40´´ exhibition view Ohne Titel (Mica), das weisse haus, Vienna, 2013 4´ 56´´ 4´ 32´´ 3´ 48´´ 3´ 19´´ Untitled (Mica), video projection on pigment print, 2011 computer, pigment print 100 x 133 cm, video 6‘ 25‘‘ Untitled (Sinop Kale Cezaevi), video projection (40 min 2 sec) on pigment print (100 x 133 cm), 2012, Photo: Yusuf Emre Yalçin Untitled (Sinop Kale Cezaevi), 2012 The installation consists of a photography and a video. The photography shows a wall with an open door, taken in the outside area of the former prison of Sinop. Onto this photography a video is projected. On the first glance it seems to be a still picture, a single moment, frozen in time. Only after a little while the spectator discovers movements in the picture. Over a time period of approximately 40 minutes figurative shadows are growing slowly into the image. One shadow appears behind the wall, visible through the open door. Other shadows are rising in front of the wall. As the people who are casting these shadows seem to stand behind the wall or outside the field of view, a fragmented narrative, which can be read in different ways, builds up. It doesn’t become clear if the people to whom these shadows belong are related to each other or to this specific place – the prison. It remains open if the shadows belong to different people or to the same person, coming to this place from time to time, probably years in between. Untitled, 2012, carbon frottage, dimensions variable I was invited to participate in the Sinopale 2012 – the Sinop Biennial. The main exhibition area was the Sinop Kale Cezaevi, the former State Prison of Sinop. The prison was closed in 1997 and, after being inaccessible for some years, reopened for visitors. Today it is one of the main sightseeing attractions in Sinop. Most recently its popularity rose because of a television series called Parmaklıklar Ardında (Behind Bars), a Turkish adaption of the German RTL-series Hinter Gittern – Der Frauenknast (Behind Bars – The Women’s Prison). For the TV production a former prison cell was altered and refurnished. Tourists pour into the historical prison to see the setting of the fictional story. As a result the prison‘s history is overshadowed, changed and trivialized. The conditions in the active prison were terrible. Torture, malnutrition, coldness and constant humidity of the cells cost more than a few prisoners - many of them jailed for “thought crimes” - their life. The historical buildings are littered with countless graffitis. In every wing of the prison, names, hearts and drawings are scratched into the walls. Most inscriptions date from the time after the prison was closed and left empty. Even today visitors add their names. The overlapping signs and characters have grown into meaningless patterns, not unlike wallpaper. A close look reveals dates next to the names, some of them go back to the time when the prison was still in operation. After localizing these inscriptions I covered them with thin paper. Gently wiping them with carbon I transferred the names and dates onto the paper. The resulting drawings were hung on the exact same position they were made. Using this technique, the names of the prisoners were highlighted, drawn out from a growing mass of names and dates. outshine, 2001, video, 1´49´´ A game of soccer is reduced to the shadows of the players on the field. All that remains of the game is the cameras pan, the field with its defining lines and the moving shadows of the players. outshine, exhibition view, ENSBA Paris, 2006 outshine, exhibition view Galerie Stephanie Hollenstein 2012, screen, black paper masking tape A paper sheet in form of a basketball has been stuck into a window. The shadow of the paper moves over the wall within a time periode of several hours. A drawing of a basketball basket is attached to the wall. The flight of a basketball – normally a very quick movement – has been put into slow motion by using sunlight and the earth rotation. Finally the ball doesn’t make the basket. The next day, if the sun shines, the play starts anew, the ball fails again. 16:05 Uhr 16:47 Uhr 17:11 Uhr whiteout, 2008, video, 1´18´´ Whiteout is the product name of an opaque correction fluid, used to erase errors in a text written or typed with a permanent ink. In the video work whiteout depicts a ski race from which the ski racer has been removed. Whiteout can also designate a weather condition in which snow and diffuse lighting can lead to a situation where sky and earth melt together and the horizon disappears. This causes the space to appear completely empty and infinite and can lead to the loss of orientation. In the video whiteout the camera looses its point of reference and seems to be following a void. What remains in the video is the speed, the mountain, the bending gates which bend without visible cause and the audience of this event. exhibition view, Biennale of Young Artists of Europe and the Mediterranean / Skopje, 2009 28. August, engraved granite boulder, 2014 In this intervention in an alpine area I engraved the shadow of a hiker into a granite boulder. Not only does this capture a magnificient moment of nature scenery, it also recalls an ancient myth. According to Pliny the Elder, the first portrait ever was the silhouette of a man, retraced before he set off to a faraway place. 28. August, engraved granite boulder, 2014 Close Up, adjustment of the Silvretta - Webcam, 2014 The permanently installed webcam on the Bielerhöhe broadcasts a segment of the Alpine landscape. Visitors to the connected website can follow the activities on the mountain pass as they happen: the lively comings and goings of day-trippers, numerous buses and cars, the lake and its massive reservoir, surrounded by impressive mountain ranges. In the intervention „Close Up“ I adjusted this webcam so that, instead of the usual panorama, it only shows a close-up of the lake. With this shift in the medial communication and experience of nature, the view of the lake was condensed into an abstract, but still naturalistic image. While the image runs through a full spectrum of colors, all actual activity happens outside the frame. As the only place on Bielerhöhe that still resists crossing, the chosen frame reflects the silence and contemplation associated with the still current, romantic ideas about hiking. camera frame before the adjustment Close Up, adjustment of the Silvretta - Webcam, 9. to 17. September 2014. Camera views at various points in time. Close Up, exhibition view, Galerie der Stadt Wels, 2015 450 nm or Ein Stück vom Himmel, permanent installation, 2014/2015 wood, paint, LEDs, sur veillance camera, computer, electronics 61,2 x 128,7 x 19 cm The light object 450 nm or Ein Stück vom Himmel (A piece of heaven/sky) seems ver y abstract at the first glance, but has a concrete picture source: A sur veillance camera is installed on the outer facade of the company building of ELIN. This camera is directed straight up at the sky and sends live images to a computer. The color and brightness of the recorded images are interpreted by a specially developed software that conver ts these signals and transmitts the information on many RGB - LEDs which are installed in a wooden, framelike object in the inner space of the building. The color values of the sky are thus reproduced by the LEDs. The work deals with the idea, to reproduce nature with the using technique. With the help of the fledgling RGB - LED -technique, outside space was brought into interior space, a little piece of heaven (Himmel is german for heaven and sky) on ear th. 450 nm or Ein Stück vom Himmel at two dif ferent points in time untitled (rue de 4 septembre / rue de hanovre), 2006, décollage, lambda print on aluminium, 60 x 90 cm untitled (Laaer Straße), 2007, décollage, lambda print on aluminium, 60 x 90 cm untitled (Pont Neuf), 2006, décollage, lambda print on aluminium, 60 x 90 cm untitled (Santa Maria della Grazie), 2007, décollage, lambda print on aluminium, 60 x 90 cm All architectural elements except the scaffolding were removed from the photograph of a building under renovation. The result is an autonomous “drawing“, which suggests the form of the erased building. The scaffolding, normally a temporary urban structure, was retained whereas the building, a permanent urban structure, was eliminated. Pop Up (office), 2009, cardboard, tape, 94 x 275 x 400 cm in collaboration with Armin B. Wagner The sculpture, entirely made out of cardboard and tape, can be opened and closed like a book. Using the technique of pop ups a mobile working station consisting of a desk, a chair and a laptop appears and disappears. The market demands flexible, mobile employees, ready to work at any time and any place. Pop Up looks like a perfect working station for them. However, the working station is neither flexible nor solid nor practical. What seemed great and magical at first, turns out to be fragile and not functional at all. Pop Up is not advertising a new type of office furniture, Pop Up criticises working conditions. Pop Up (Eckbank), 2012, cardboard, tape, 95 x 291 x 396 cm in collaboration with Armin B. Wagner Bubblegum, 2010, acrylic on glass, dimensions variable The instant of blowing a Gum Bubble has been captured in glass and thus became an enduring, infinite moment. Bubblegum, intervention, supermarket Maxima Nida / Lithuania, 2011 LIDDY SCHEFFKNECHT born in December 1980 in Austria lives in Vienna 2007 2006 Diploma / University of Applied Arts Vienna; Bernhard Leitner / Ernst Strouhal / Erwin Wurm Diplôme national supérieur d’arts plastiques / ENSBA Paris; Jean-Luc Vilmouth Solo Exhibitions 2015 shift, Galerie der Stadt Wels 2013 spot, Sotheby’s Artist Quarterly, Vienna 2012 eleven minutes twenty seconds, Kunsthaus Graz sence, Ex-garage / Maribor 2011 Liddy Scheffknecht, Georg Kargl Box / Vienna Bubblegums, The Outside Gallery Window / Milan 2008 Take Aways, Galerie Wilma Lock, St. Gallen / Switzerland whiteout, Galerie Jeune Création / Paris 2006 scaffoldings, The Outside Gallery Window / Milan Duo Exhibitions (O)budowa, Liddy Scheffknecht, Jan Mioduszewski, Austrian Cultural Forum Warsaw, curated by Jacek Malinowski 2015 /TILT/, Liddy Scheffknecht, Armin B. Wagner, Zentralkunstgarage, Lustenau 2012 Parcours, Claudia Larcher/ Liddy Scheffknecht, Galerie Stephanie Hollenstein Lustenau, curated by Winfried Nussbaummüller Bernd Oppl, Liddy Scheffknecht, bb 15 / Linz 2010 Group Exhibitions (selection) Transparency, Georg Kargl Fine Arts, Vienna, curated by Fiona Liewehr 2015 Landscape: Transformations of an Idea – Art of the 1800 to the Present day from the Collection of the Neue Galerie Graz, Neue Galerie Graz, curated by Gudrun Danzer and Günther Holler-Schuster Random thoughts of a daily light, das weisse haus, Vienna, curated by Alexandra Grausam und Markus Taxacher Schneesalon, Georg Kargl Box / Vienna 2014 Blow-Up, Albertina Vienna, curated by Walter Moser * côté interieur, Kunstpavillon Innsbruck, curated by Ingeborg Erhart und Bernd Oppl Inattentional Blindness, Galerie Zilberman, Istanbul, curated by Isin Önol * 2013 Phantoms & Ghosts, das weisse haus / Wien, curated by Karin Fisslthaler und Bernd Oppl The Intransigent Ticket – The Artist as a filter, CSULA Fine Arts Gallery / Los Angeles, curated by Karin Mayr & Martin Sturm Pli selon Pli, 22,48 m² / Paris, curated by Yvonne Rüscher * Elastic Video, Kunstraum Niederösterreich, Wien, curated by PLINQUE * 2012 4. International Sinop Biennale, Sinop / Turkey, curated by Isin Önol Genius loci, Kulturpolis, Klaipéda / Lithuania, curated by Yulia Startseva and Vytautas Michelkevičius The Digital Uncanny, Edith – Ruß – Haus for Media Art, Oldenburg, curated by Brigitte Felderer * 2011 This is Happening II, Georg Kargl Fine Arts / Vienna, curated by Fiona Liewehr Donetsk goes Contemporary, Art Point Donetsk / Ukraine, curated by Andrei Loginov and Steve Schepens Space Odyssey, März / Linz, curated by Bernd Oppl 2011 Meet everyone at once, start an artist-run-space, 0gms / Sofia Elastic Video, Tokio Wonder Site Hongo / Tokyo, curated by PLINQUE * 2010 HAPPY HOUR, In der Kubatur des Kabinetts - der kunstsalon im fluc, Fluc / Vienna Qui vive, 2nd Moscow International Biennale for Young Art / Moscow * Mathias Garnitschnig, Claudia Larcher, Liddy Scheffknecht, c.art / Dornbirn, curated by Gerold Tagwerker Austria la vista, baby, The Art Foundation / Athen, curated by Christian Rupp * Petit Plinque, Museumquartier / Vienna, curated by PLINQUE * Fine Line, Georg Kargl Fine Arts / Vienna, curated by Fiona Liewehr WIR WOHNEN, Kunstraum Niederösterreich, Vienna, curated by Ingeborg Strobl * 2009 Plinque Projéction, Cité des Arts, Paris, curated by PLINQUE Biennale of Young Artists of Europe and the Mediterranean / Skopje * Jeune Création 2008, Parc de la Villette, Espace Charlie Parker / Paris * 2008 GAMES. Kunst und Politik der Spiele, Kunsthalle Vienna project space, curated by Ernst Strouhal, Mathias Fuchs and Florian Bettel * * catalogue Grants | Residencies 2014 2013 2011 2010 2003 AIR Silvretta Atelier, Bielerhöhe, Vorarlberg BMUKK - Studio Westbahnstraße / Vienna Vorarlberg Grant for Visual Arts AIR, Art Colony Nida Startstipendium BMUKK Adlmüllerstipendium