KUB 2021.02
Pamela Rosenkranz
17 | 04 – 04 | 07 | 2021
“Particles of the Internet, shimmering script, intangible. Old knowledge rolls off, and yet it carries the mythology of entire cultures and generates deeply rooted reflexes.”
Pamela Rosenkranz
How permeable are we, how absorbent? Pamela Rosenkranz perceives people as membranes. She favors trenchant means for her exhibitions. In the one at Kunsthaus Bregenz she is replying to the building’s architecture. While Peter Zumthor searches for phenomenological effects: light, sound, coolness, sensitivity, and the general disposition of individuals all playing a significant role, Pamela Rosenkranz questions the certainties of authentic experience. There is no such thing as pure experience or an immunity to invisible existences, which is something that has become abundantly clear during the pandemic. The human condition is modeled both osmotically and artificially.
Light sources hang in the spaces like Gothic windows. Their outward facing surfaces display fields of intense blue. They do not constitute images in any ordinary sense, but are rather glass windows emanating a saturated, intense blue light, accumulating like sediment within spaces of glass and concrete. Screens shimmer, providing depth, blue being the color of contemplation, associated with coolness, limitlessness, and desire. In many religions blue is also a symbol of ascension and salvation. But colors are also events in terms of physics. They possess measurable wavelengths associated with the development of the sense of sight that took place underwater during prehistoric times. Rosenkranz employs aesthetics as a fundamental means of research into the sensory, placing it closer to the experiments of the late-Impressionists than Yves Klein, who produced monochrome blue paintings, consequently “reifying” (Rosenkranz) the hue by patenting it.
What are color and light? How do smells occur and how do the receptors sensitive to them behave? How are sound and vibration registered? And isn’t a building, similarly to a living being, also able to collect and preserve such experiences as fluctuations in temperature, degrees of humidity, and tremors? Acoustic vibrations may be evanescent, but do not disappear. The same applies to neurological intrusions and biochemical substances that remain nondegradable. Humans are no longer sovereign subjects, but synthetic ones.
Rosenkranz suggests such a mingling of synthetic and natural substances in arcane mise-en-scènes. Plastic sheeting shimmers, sound waves vibrate, humidity swirls, and an archaic smell that is artificially created pervades the spaces. Everything flows; this ancient philosophical observation is now gaining new relevance through the emergence of the artificial.
The upper floor is home to a snake. It is a computer controlled machine that reacts to electromagnetic radiation, sidewinding, raising its head and observing its surroundings, or biding its time motionlessly on the floor. Reflective scales conceal its network of sensors and semiconductors, while the inaudible sound of electronic noise recharges it. In terms of art history, the “snakebot” may be located within the tradition of kinetic sculpture, but is nevertheless based primarily upon scientific attempts to replace not only living beings with robots but also the organic with algorithms. Although its appearance could be perceived as artificial and unnatural, the robotic serpent still provokes feelings from the depths of our evolutionary past. Our eyes specialize in detecting the patterns of both a snake’s scales and its movements. Human eyesight has apparently improved significantly during evolution. What do we see when encountering a robot snake? Danger, beauty, or algorithms?
The exhibition dissolves any separation between the natural and artificial. It becomes an animated “habitat” for a robotic creature that is controlled by our devices and which connects everything. Its perceptions reverberate throughout the entire building. Signals from our cell phones are already being fed into it even as we first encounter it. The movements of the snake in relation to our bodies, the contemplation of art, or what is being represented as a deeply archaic need in humans, but which also apprehends us physically, permeates the exhibition. The building becomes an organism of expanded biological interactivity.
Biography
Pamela Rosenkranz (*1979 in Uri, Switzerland) lives and works in Zurich and Zug. In 2004 she graduated with a Master of Fine Arts from Bern University of the Arts; she also studied comparative literature at the University of Zurich.
She was already receiving a great deal of international attention while still a student. Her most recent exhibitions include: Alien Culture, GAMeC Bergamo (2017), IF THE SNAKE, Okayama Art Summit, Okayama (2019), Là où les eaux se mêlent, 15th Biennale de Lyon (2019), Leaving the Echo Chamber, Sharjah Biennial 14 (2019), and Slight Agitation 2/4: Pamela Rosenkranz at Fondazione Prada, Milan (2017).
In 2015 Rosenkranz represented Switzerland at the Venice Biennale.