HICA, the Highland Institute for Contemporary Art, Inverness-shire, Scotland

and grey) (area . space of contemporary and media art, Korcula, Croatia

presents

Concretely Immaterial
25 July - 11 September, 2011


This collaborative project will form an exhibition in two parts, showing 
at grey) (area space of contemporary and media art, Korčula, Croatia, 
from 25th July - 7th August, and HICA, the Highland Institute for 
Contemporary Art, Inverness-shire, Scotland, from 14th August - 11th 
September.

Artists showing at grey) (area will be Eloi Puig (Spain), Thomson and 
Craighead (UK) and Geoff Lucas (UK). Artists showing at HICA will be 
Samuel Cepeda (Mexico), Nina Czegledy (Canada)/ Marcus Neustetter 
(South-Africa), Darko Fritz (Croatia / Netherlands), Andreja Kulunčić 
(Croatia), Edita Pecotić (Croatia / UK), Transfer (Croatia) and Goran 
Trbuljak (Croatia).

The exhibition explores the possible physical nature of thought and the 
‘virtual’. Virtual states and processes are variously employed in the 
artworks, especially through computer technology, though, in line with 
the title, Concretely Immaterial, the exhibition proposes these 
processes, as well as such things as the works’ effects in the spaces of 
the galleries, and the experience of the viewers, as substantial and 
real. This sense is perhaps exemplified by Darko Fritz’ presentation of 
the Internet error-message 204_NO_CONTENT.

The collaborative form of the exhibition provides a framework for this 
exploration, as both galleries are at some distance from each other, and 
occupy what might be considered remote locations; viewers, it is 
expected, will experience the exhibition at least partly through 
technology or their imaginations.

The relation of physicality and thought is also explored in the works 
themselves: Samuel Cepeda’s Clouds have no Nation parallels our 
knowledge of reality with the physical nature of clouds, a nature which 
science has difficulty in determining. Edita Pecotić’s Temporary 
Internet Files are time-lapse videos of a transforming landscape that 
display various layers of information, both real and virtual. Nina 
Czegledy and Marcus Neustetter’s book project, Visual Collider, refers 
to the Large Hadron Collider, the world’s most powerful particle 
accelerator and the quantum effects it aimed to observe: analogous 
reactions are created for the viewer, prompting uncertain responses 
through juxtaposed imagery.

Time, as an essential aspect of this relation, is emphasized in works 
such as Andreja Kulunčić’s examination of the people of Korčula’s 
changing attitude to their city through history, or Geoff Lucas’ work, 
an animated text considering the paintings of Jackson Pollock and the 
concretization of individual actions in time and space.

The exhibition has been curated by Darko Fritz and HICA.

Concretely Immaterial, at HICA, has been supported by the Henry Moore 
Foundation.

It will run at the Korcula Town Museum, Croatia, from 25 July - 7 
August, and HICA, Inverness-shire, Scotland, from 14 August - 11 September.


grey) (area . space of contemporary and media art
http://grey-area.org

Gradski muzej Korcula / Korcula Town Museum, Trg Sv. Marka bb,
http://www.gm-korcula.com

HICA http://www.h-i-c-a.org
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