“noc noc”
noc noc
(SKU. 3289)
-
Date
2015 -
Technique
marble resin -
Dimensions
(H x W x D) 20 x 23 x 46 cm (H x W x D) 17 x 20 x 33 cm -
Edition
10 + 2PA -
Comes with certificate of authenticity
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Old wooden posts are elements that the artist explores extensively in his most recent production, such as in the installations "Waiting Room" (2013) and "Possibility Matters" (2014). In them, they refer to an exploited, dominated nature, which is transformed by man to provide light and shelter, but which, upon losing its function, maintains interest due to its verticality, texture, color, and smell.
If in the works mentioned above the trunks gain interior space and are revealed in their entirety, challenging the relationships of weight and measure, here the elements distance themselves from this idea: they touch the wall, cross it, are revealed in parts, and are light, punctual. What is there beyond these stumps? What paths do they follow?
Furthermore, the two pieces that make up the work allude to wood due to their shape and surface texture, but they are made with resin and marble powder. A play on materials, natural and artificial, that further enhances the possible paths that the viewer's imagination can take.
A poetic and potentially creative still life.
The artist writes about the work: “I remember driving along the eucalyptus forests, the beat of the tree lines and the voids. Seeing only the light of the streets and the darkness of the trunks, I thought of an empty film: that moment at the beginning of the reel when the film had not yet started. Film, just film. The forest was there and it was not there.
Fruits, flowers and vegetables in a vase, on a table. They were once in nature, they are arranged there, a bridge between the strange nature and food. Someone put them there (but we don't see who). Two beats: the matter must exist there, but it is suspended. It will be eaten, it will spoil.
Forest, trunk, tree, post, stump. A wooden stump - giant asparagus - emerges from the wall, but there is no wood there.
What remains is what held the wood. Ghost. Still life.”