Aksioma – Institute for Contemporary Art, Ljubljana, is glad to announce:

 

Nika Oblak & Primož Novak

And Now for Something Completely Different 10

Solo exhibition

 

Aksioma | Project Space

Komenskega 18, Ljubljana

 

Exhibition opening: Wednesday, 12 June 2019 at 7 pm

Open through: 12 July 2019

 

 <https://aksioma.org/oblak-novak/index.html> aksioma.org/oblak-novak

 

 

A man is trapped inside a screen, walking endlessly. His movements, careful and 
repetitive, generate a rhythmic, hypnotic sound. As he moves, the rectangular 
screen moves too, rotating like a big hamster wheel. Where do we come from? 
What are we? Where are we going? is a kinetic video installation that playfully 
reflects on our contemporary condition, depicting humans in a perpetual and 
pointless engagement with technological devices. Our device screens are portals 
to other dimensions: they help us to learn and remember, to create, and even to 
connect with each other, but at the same time they are powerful traps. Locking 
our eyes and our attention, they can become prisons, preventing us to establish 
more profound and complex relationships with the world and the people around 
us. The more we use the machine, the more we tend to resemble it: like Charlie 
Chaplin in Modern Times, when he morphs into a human screwdriver, the man 
inside the LCD adapts to the screen’s movements and limitations, transforming 
himself into a gear of the mechanism. In a wider sense, the work can also be 
considered a reflection on progress itself: we are constantly moving but making 
no real advancement, forced into hectic activity with no clear purpose. The 
title chosen for the work, which is taken after Paul Gauguin’s iconic painting 
D'ou Venons Nous / Que Sommes Nous / Où Allons Nous (1897), reinforces this 
idea.

 

Nika Oblak & Primoz Novak use technology as a self-reflection tool; they build 
complex machines capable of bridging the physical and the virtual, the digital 
and the mechanical, the natural and the artificial. Since 2003, they have 
produced a large number of projects, including performances, films, photography 
and installations, that together constitute an ongoing investigation on 
contemporary life, focusing on its most controversial aspects: the traps of 
consumerism, the oppressive structures of work and politics, the ambiguous 
relationship between reality and fiction, the hidden perils of an uncritical 
use of technologies. In The Box (2005), for example, we see the artists inside 
a TV screen, trying to find a way out by pushing and kicking the walls. Their 
actions infiltrate the physical world by bending the frame of the monitor, but 
they are never able to break out: the mass media system is a giant rubber wall 
that won’t let us escape its influence, no matter how hard we try. This idea of 
helplessly trying to establish a physical connection between what’s inside the 
screen and what’s outside, opening a breach, reminds us of The Last Nine 
Minutes (1977), a seminal performance by American artist Douglas Davis. Like 
many other artists of the period, Davis engaged in a profound reflection about 
the rising world of telecommunication, considering its profound impact on human 
consciousness and social relationships. Despite these similarities, however, 
Oblak & Novak’s work is very different, aesthetically and conceptually: humans 
today are not just exploring new tools of communication, they are completely 
fused with them, to the point of not being able to recognise their true impact. 
To describe this new situation, the artists build alternative machines, ironic 
devices capable of depicting in a very accurate way our daily life: a circle of 
recursive actions that are both entertaining and exhausting.

In Endless Column (2017), which contains a direct visual reference to the work 
of media art pioneer Nam June Paik but also pays homage to avant-garde sculptor 
Constantin Brancusi, the protagonist tries to balance several monitor on her 
head, in a circus-like performance. All of her attention is focused on the 
action of keeping everything in place, without losing a single piece. In a 
world saturated with media contents, and surrounded by devices that 
continuously demand our attention, we always feel challenged, chased, and in 
the process of missing something. Distracted by this impossible task of 
managing everything, we slowly turn into entertaining machine ourselves, 
becoming part of the global media spectacle.

 

- Valentina Tanni

 

 

Nika Oblak & Primoz Novak have been working collectively since 2003. In their 
art practice they examine the influence of media and capital on contemporary 
society, dissecting its visual and linguistic structure. Oblak & Novak have 
exhibited worldwide, in venues like the Sharjah Biennial (AE), Japan Media Arts 
Festival, Tokyo (JP), Istanbul Biennial (TR), Biennale Cuvee, Linz (AT), 
Transmediale Berlin (DE), FILE Sao Paulo (BR) ... They have received numerous 
grants and awards, including the CYNETART Award by the Trans-Media-Akademie 
Hellerau in Dresden (DE), an honorary mention of art critics at Biennale WRO, 
Wroclaw (PL), the White Aphroid Award for artistic achievement by MMC KIBLA, 
Maribor (SI) and a Rihard Jakopic honorable mention, awarded by the Slovenian 
Association of Fine Arts Societies, the Academy of Fine Arts and Design in 
Ljubljana, Moderna galerija and the Slovene Association of Art Critics (SI). 
Their work can be found at  <http://www.oblak-novak.org> 
http://www.oblak-novak.org

 

 

Production of the exhibition: Aksioma – Institute for Contemporary Art, 
Ljubljana, 2019

The project Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going? is a 
co-production between Aksioma – Institute for Contemporary Art, KID KIBLA and 
Asia Culture Center.

 

Supported by: The Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Slovenia and the 
Municipality of Ljubljana.

 

 

Marcela Okretič

Aksioma | Institute for Contemporary Art, Ljubljana

Jakopičeva 11, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia

 

Aksioma | Project Space

Komenskega 18, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia

tel.: + 386 – (0)590 54360

gsm: + 386 – (0)41 – 250830

e-mail: marc...@aksioma.org

www.aksioma.org

 

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