Exhibition
With or Without You
As part of The Glenkeen Variations exhibition and event series
Exhibition Opening: Thursday, 07 November 2024, 5pm
All welcome.
Fully synthetic plastic, which fittingly made its debut in New York in the early 20th century, quickly took the world by storm, initiating what many now call the age of plastic. Today, we recite with heavy hearts that plastic has been found in the deepest parts of the ocean, and that microplastic particles have infiltrated our lungs, blood, and even our brains. Plastic is our modern Frankenstein, destined to outlive us all. Thus, even in the idyllic Glenkeen Garden in West Cork, some artists in residence found themselves delving into synthetic thoughts and polymer dreams.
With plastic resources nearing depletion since the early 36,000s p.o. (post-organic), the termites and their alliance with Cockroach Kind are entering a new era. The Royal Museum of Termitology hosts an exhibit showcasing cutting-edge discoveries in drill-scanning, excro-printing, and Hu-man research, highlighting their remarkable journey to revive synthetic polymer production and reclaim their sustenance. During their three-month residency in Glenkeen Garden, Filippa Pettersson and Kristin Reiman visioned a post-human world where termites learn to eat and process plastics. As a non-renewable resource, the dwindling supply of plastics now poses the gravest concern to termite civilisation.
Following the exhibition at the Goethe-Institut in Dublin, an artist talk will take place at the National Sculpture Factory in Cork. In Ballydehob, at the Working Artist Studios, the artists will offer a presentation of their work.
NATIONAL SCULPTURE FACTORY, CORK
08/11/2024, 1pm
Artist Talk
WORKING ARTIST STUDIOS, BALLYDEHOB
09/11/2024, 5pm
Presentation
Filippa Pettersson (*1987 Södermanland, Sweden) lives in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. From 2009 to 2015, she was a student of fine arts at the Städelschule, Frankfurt am Main. Since then, she has her own studio and works in the fields of installation, sculpture, sound and performance. Her works are built on narrative structures, either by using already existing stories or by making them upon her own.
Kristin Reiman (*1992 Tallinn, Estonia) works with the notion of discomfort, human malfuctions, and the skewness of perception using sound, speech, and writing. Their works often take the form of audioplays, where one or multiple voices woe over trivial problems and cyclic thoughts. Reiman has graduated from Städelschule, Frankfurt am Main, Germany and the Estonian Academy of Arts (Fine Arts BA), having additionally studied at the Royal Academy of Arts, Antwerp (Fine Arts). Their latest works include “The Drowse” (2019), an opera about fatigue, and “Muffle, Mute and Dim” (2019), a fictional radio show reflecting on loneliness, as well as numerous online and collaborative sound projects. Kristin Reiman lives and works in Frankfurt am Main. Reiman is also active as a musician as Man Rei.
Nikolas Schmid-Pfähler (*1987) and Carolin Liebl (*1989) met during their studies at the Hochschule für Gestaltung Offenbach, Germany, (graduated in 2017) and have been working together as an artist duo since 2012. Their works include sculptural, kinetic, installation and robotic works, whereby technology always plays an important role. In 2019, they founded the studiohouse "Atelier Wäscherei" with artist friends in Offenbach, Germany where they work. In 2020, the ZKM in Karlsruhe, germany purchased one of their works.
The exhibition and event series is curated by Ben Livne Weitzman.
Gallery Opening Hours
Monday - Thursday 10:00am – 9:00pm
Friday 10:00am – 5.00pm
Saturday 10:00am – 3:00pm
Closed on Sundays and Bank Holidays
Please note that due to the protected structure of the Georgian building the exhibition is only partially wheelchair accessible.
Press Coverage
Presented by the Crespo Foundation and the Goethe-Institut Irland as part of the exhibition and event series The Glenkeen Variations.
Details
Goethe-Institut Irland
37 Merrion Square
Dublin
D02 XK52
Ireland
Language: English
Price: Admission free
+353 1 6801110 info-dublin@goethe.de