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EVA RÄDER / JACK HOLDEN
STATIC ON THE RADIO
Februari 12 - April 22, 2012
Saturday and Sunday, 2 - 5 PM
Closed Febr. 19 (Su);
Open: April 9 (Mo) With the exhibition
‘Static on the Radio’, Berlin-based artists Eva Räder (Ochenhausen,
Germany, 1978) and Jack Holden (Nottingham, UK, 1979) present new
works. For this exhibition Räder and Holden have worked as a
collaborative duo.
Räder and Holden have created a new series of
works specifically for BIS71; a series of collaborative
drawings/ collages and an installation comprising of ceramic sculptures.
‘Static
on the Radio’ refers to white noise on a radio receiver. The
title is a play on words and refers to the fact that each artist
usually has their very own specific frequency of interests that makes
them unique. In this exhibition, however, they have embraced the
idea of creative collaboration.
The process of making the
collaborative drawings/collage was entirely free between the two
artists and allowed complete autonomy. Each artist would make their
contributions in isolation, and in most cases, each drawing/collage was
passed back between each other at least twice before completion. The
agreement between the artists was that each was free to do what they
like on all of the drawings, including to mask, erase or work on top of
the other artists ideas and marks. Räder and Holden consciously decided
not to discuss the drawing works during the process of making them, or
to discuss the overriding intentions of each artist for the
works. By making these decisions, Räder and Holden fully embraced
the democratic nature of working together, exploring their differences
of interest, expression and technique and allowing for works to emerge
without one person having more influence than the other. The challenge
for each artist was to end up with works of art where both agreed that
they were complete and meaningful and works that conveyed a connection
between Räder and Holden’s individual frequencies, interests and
specific aesthetics.
The installation shown in the big
hall of Bisscheroux’s space comprises of over 60 ceramic
sculptures. When the artists first visited the BIS71 space they
were both struck by the atmosphere, scale and impressive and imposing
nature of the big hall. After having discussed the possibilities of
what to exhibit in the great hall, they would often refer to the space
as akin to a radio receiver and that whatever put into the space would
by definition change the sound of the frequency within the space. The
sculptures are an attempt to create fantastical creatures, animals,
plants and forms and when installed together represent an exotic garden
or planet of sorts. These sculptures are characterised by an interest
in the physical aspects of materials and modes of construction and
emphasise the process of making itself. The forms of the
sculptures are often sketch-like and made with a laconic execution, and
when seen on their own, can seem throwaway and unspectacular. However,
when installed together, the sculptures are an attempt to create a wave
of white noise that continuously hums through Bisscheroux’s
space. Here the absence of the demand for perfection lends the
sculptures a physical idea of the constant transformation of the human
mind, of thoughts that come and go, at once organic and malleable,
floating through time.
www.eva-raeder.de www.jackholden.org
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