Thomas Scheffer
META – floating senses


Opening 27 May 2016 19:00 

27 May till 26 June 2016 

Opening Hours: Wed + Sat 15:00-18:00 & by appointment
Kolonie Wedding Weekend: Sun 29/05/2016 15:00-18:00, Fri 24/06/2016 
19:00-22:00, Sun 26/06/2016 15:00-18:00

COPYRIGHTberlin 

Patrick Huber | Ute Lindner Schwedenstr. 16
D-13357 Berlin-Wedding U8/U9 Osloer Straße 

M +49-(0)178-356 70 77 m...@copyrightberlin.de <mailto:m...@copyrightberlin.de> 
www.copyrightberlin.de <http://www.copyrightberlin.de/>

THOMAS SCHEFFER ‚META’

In the current digital age when the language of the image is in a continual 
state of perceptual slippage, the artist Thomas Scheffer challenges anew the 
meaning of conventional perception. He restores to images a unique sensory 
corporality and a subtle sense of personal visual engagement. In the work 
‘META’ currently exhibited in the project room called Co- pyright, in Berlin, 
he has developed a video with pseudo-random format effects that derive in the 
first instance through the artist’s ability to manipulate interstitial 
inadequacies of computer technologies. The outcome is a subsequently downloa- 
ded and ever changing image that creates the unique possibilities of individual 
states of sensory interactivity. However, unlike the conventional system of 
mechanical or dexterous interactions with a screen (metaphorically a picture 
surface) in this instance it is the slightest sensory movement of the head or 
body that generates the random response of the image on the screen. Where this 
differs from conventional interaction the effect is never completely materially 
repeatable, since the pseudo randomness denies a fully cognisant or aware state 
of repeated exactitude. It remains pseudo-random and we must suppose since in 
cosmological terms there can never be pure randomness as such in a given 
material world. That is the case even if you accept what quantum theorists 
claim, namely that a state of pure randomness does not need a condition of 
physicality. 
The screen image ‘META’ is therefore as its title suggests the effect of a 
denoting change of position, something that exists behind that of mere first 
visual appearance. But what is innovatory in this context is that denotation 
resides in the viewer’s unforeseen variable state of engagement with the work. 
In a witty sense while Foucault (et al) spoke of the death of the author, the 
outcome of the work transferred to reader or viewer, in this instance 
Scheffer’s observer becomes both the author and viewer of the effects that are 
generated. The colour image ‘META’ is primarily blue and red, psychically
and symbolically material-temporal and sidereal, it gives off the sense of an 
active expression with an optical connotati- on. The outcome is an charged 
image of animated informalism, reminiscent of the post-war informel or of the 
‘abstract expressionist’ tendencies as seen in painting, while at the same time 
evoking the optical resonances of altered perception that comes from an 
interactive participation in the work. It is part of Scheffer aim to create a 
unique body of work that fuses the physical and emotional, creating images that 
incorporate a whole range of various sensory optical experiences. Whether 
realised in colour or in multi-screen black and white projected variables as 
his investigation and pseudo-random realisations seen in ‘CYTO’, the ambition 
is to establish a new visual language of human experience. It is for this 
reason when downloaded and projected these images take on the essential meaning 
and literal truth of the term ‘moving pictu- res’ as the image contents on 
screen apparently rush headlong towards you. This is far from and intentionally 
distinct from the narrative propensities of the conventional uses of film and 
photography. It is a pure optical informality that reinforces the process of 
looking. 
A return to the phenomenology of perception after the semiotic and conceptual 
concerns of the last thirty or so years, opens up again the reinvigoration of 
the process of truly looking at things as pure phenomena, as separate from the 
looking for things through the signifier-signified-sign equation. What Thomas 
Scheffer strives for is the desire to create an unfettered state of imaginative 
opticality, to reach out towards an expansion of the visual experience within 
modern life human culture today. To do this we must return to the body, to the 
Dasein or ‘being there’ within the actual experience. Yet we are not talking 
simply about the physical body as material entity, notwithstanding its obvious 
component necessity, but rather that of cognitive body of bio-chemical 
consciousness. That is to say the synaptic bodily processes that feed into our 
essential phenomenological experiences of the world. With all the contemporary 
and opaque discourses concer- ning virtuality, it has become important again to 
establish again where phenomenal realities begin and end. We need to 
re-generate our contact with the phenomenal ‘real’, rather than divert 
ourselves into the relativized ‘reality’ that currently grounds the conditions 
of contemporary life. The artist Thomas Scheffer is on a quest, he is in fast 
pursuit and is aim at creating a new personal-interpersonal language of seeing. 
If his works challenge the viewer, they do so with the aim of human betterment, 
that is in order to better understand the confused optical seeing world in 
which we live. 

©Mark Gisbourne 15 May 2016 


-- 
rohrpost - deutschsprachige Liste zur Kultur digitaler Medien und Netze
Archiv: http://www.nettime.org/rohrpost 
http://post.in-mind.de/pipermail/rohrpost/
Ent/Subskribieren: http://post.in-mind.de/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/rohrpost/

Antwort per Email an