Its blueness soothes the sharp burn in your eyes

Fri, 7 Apr 2017 19:00
at I: project space

On view
7 Apr-6 May 2017

Its blueness soothes the sharp burn in your eyes

Artists: Wu Ding, Michiel Hilbrink, Martin Kohout, Anahita Razmi, Nina Wiesnagrotzki

Curated by: Antonie Angerer & Anna-Viktoria Eschbach, I: project space

The exhibition pays tribute to the post factual world that crystalized itself in 2016. This multi-layered, complex and sometimes only subjective view on the world that feeds itself with bits and pieces of information from the Internet. The new media, with its myriad screens and streams, makes reality so fragmented it becomes ungraspable, pushing us towards, or allowing us to flee, into vitual realities and fantasies. The flight into techno-fantasies is intertwined with economic and social uncertainty. The abuse of facts and the decline of the authorities on facts have revealed how utterly fragile and easily manipulated facts can be and how virtually all authoritative information sources need to be challenged. 

"Its blueness soothes the sharp burn in your eyes" will show artists and their multiple ways of creating or offering alternative views of our realities, point out how realities are constructed and can be obstructed or manipulated. The works in this exhibition will bring the viewer to a halt to rearrange his view, think critically about our perception and start to construct their own standpoint. 

I: project space will incubate Loris at Postdamer Strasse as a space that functions as hybrid between different worlds, different realities. The Beijing-based space has functioned as a connecting space between different cultures, multiple perspectives on art and initator for exchange of different ideas since 2014. Part of the practice is to enter a discourse and create interruptions to start new dialogue independent from the already existing one. 

The exhibition is supported by: Sishanf Art Museum, Beijing and Ursula Wandres Stiftung 

Wu Ding_An occasional content and a form of necessity
Wu Ding_An occasional content and a form of necessity