LENGUAJE
Abdul Vas, Alejandro Leonhardt, Alvaro Gil, Bel Fullana, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Ian Waelder, Joan Morey, Jonathan Meese, Marlena Kudlicka, Nuria Fuster, Pedro Barateiro, Pep Vidal, Rafa Forteza, Rasmus Nilausen, Secundino Hernández, Valerie Krause, Wilfredo Prieto
16 December, 2016 - 17 March, 2017

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Ian Waelder, Nuria Fuster, Pedro Barateiro

 

Pedro Barateiro

DOUBLE SMILE, 2012

Ink on paper, 68,5 x 53 cm

Nuria Fuster

Wearing iron thoughts, 2016

Iron and fabric. Variable measurements. 

 

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Álvaro Gil, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Alejandro Leonhardt, Valerie Krause, Rasmus Nilausen, Nuria Fuster.

Ian Waelder

The acrobat plays with heights with a kind of void, 2016

Vinyl, Ed.3+1

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Pedro Barateiro, Valerie Krause, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21.

Drawings by Pedro Barateiro on top of site-specific installation by Álvaro Gil

Untitled (prize), 2012

Smile and plinth over landscape, 2012 

Untitled (Pyramid), 2012

The reader, 2012

Ink on paper, 68,5 x 53 cm

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21.

Drawings by Pedro Barateiro on top of site-specific installation by Álvaro Gil

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21(l-r):

Secundino Hernández, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Álvaro Gil, Alejandro Leonhardt

Álvaro Gil

Tetra 6, 2015

Tetra 7, 2015

Wood and painting , ø30 cm ø40 cm

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Daniel Steegmann Mangrané

I, 2014
5  aluminum gray and pink chains. Variable measures

 

Secundino Hernández

Sin título, 2012

Oil on canvas, 300 x 200 cm

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Bell Fullana, Wilfredo Prieto, Valerie Krause, Jonathan Meese, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Pep Vidal, Marlena Kudlicka

 

Bel Fullana

Tarzana’s affair, 2016
Oil and spray painting on framed canvas, 81 x 100 cm

Wilfredo prieto

La pelota redonda viene en caja cuadrada, 2011

Ball and box. 23x25x25 cm Ed. 1+1 PA

Marlena Kudlicka

Unprotected 0 Fig. 1, 2015

Sculpture powder, coated steel, glass 280x130x26 cm

Unprotected 0 / Ingredients Fig.1, 2015

Print on paper steel glass
28.5 x 37 cm

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Bel Fullana, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Marlena Kudlicka

 

Bel Fullana

Paradise waterfall, 2016

Oil on framed canvas, 65x 54 cm

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Marlena Kudlicka, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Rafa Forteza

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21.

Rafa Forteza

Untitled, 2016

Mixed media, 150×150 cm

White nose, 2007

Aluminum, 40x20x14 cm

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Rafa Forteza, Bel Fullana, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Secundino Hernández, Wilfredo Prieto, Rasmus Nilausen

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21.

Rasmus Nilausen

The harvest, 2014

Oil on linen, 100×81 cm

The hole, 2014

Oil on linen, 55×46 cm

The cluster II, 2014

Oil on linen, 116×89 cm

Hot gazpacho, 2014

Oil on linen, 55×46 cm

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Rasmus Nilausen, Wilfredo Prieto, Pedro Barateiro

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Rasmus Nilausen, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Pedro Barateiro

Pedro Barateiro

RUMOR, 2015
Iron and enamel paint. Variable dimensions 

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Rasmus Nilausen, Pedro Barateiro, Wilfredo Prieto, Bel Fullana, Valerie Krause

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Bel Fullana

 

Valerie Krause 

OT. , 2008

Plaster, 63x130x130 cm

Abdul Vas

Dallas TX Series, 2015

Ink on paper, 21×29,7

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Bel Fullana, Secundino Hernández, Rasmus Nilausen, Wilfredo Prieto, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Pedro Barateiro, Valerie Krause. 

 

Daniel Steegmann

I, 2014
5  aluminum gray and pink chains. Variable measures

Detail

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Abdul Vas

Abdul Vas

Dallas TX Series, 2015

Ink on paper, 21×29,7

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Daniel Steegmann Mangrané

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Jonathan Meese, Valerie Krause, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Pep Vidal

Jonathan Meese

Untitled, 2008

Mixed media, 400 x 200 cm

Pep Vidal

1381,25m2, 2016
420,25 kg of painting.
Amount of paint needed to cover the entire contents of the exhibition with one layer.

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Pep Vidal, sound piece by Joan Morey, Bel Fullana

Joan Morey

A piece of monologue (after Beckett), 2007-2009.
Site-specific installation inside the storageroom of the gallery, leaving the door halfway open.

Stereo sound, 16’04’’ in loop. Edition of 3 + 2 AP

“Lenguaje” 2016. Installation view at L21 (l-r):

Pep Vidal, sound piece by Joan Morey, Bel Fullana, Marlena Kudlicka

Alejandro Leonhardt

When forests shine, 2012

Video, 04:24

Abdul Vas / Alejandro Leonhardt / Alvaro Gil / Bel Fullana / Daniel Steegmann Mangrané / Ian Waelder / Joan Morey / Jonathan Meese / Marlena Kudlicka / Nuria Fuster / Pedro Barateiro / Pep Vidal / Rafa Forteza / Rasmus Nilausen / Secundino Hernández / Valerie Krause / Wilfredo Prieto

“Mathematical relations aren’t firstly referred in our minds in virtue of a conceptual process, but rather a product of some kind of purely quantitative intuition, and they are innate to those individuals, in the same way the number of petals, in virtue of a formal principle, is innate to a plant, or the num- ber of capsules that contain the seed of an apple.”

Johannes Kepler. Harmony of the world.

For some, mathematics are a natural language, present in most things, applicable to multiple aspects in our daily life. For others like me, maths are something abstract, hard to understand and that in a practical sense are only useful in relation to finances or cooking. I don’t mean to underestimate the importance of maths, instead, I want to make room for the idea that us, human beings, innately have completely opposed sensitivities through which we perceive the reality that surrounds us. Just like a mathematical mind sees numbers as a language capable of establishing infinite bridges in the physi- cal world – even when invisible to our eyes-, making underlying realities appear, for a mind like mine it’s aesthetic forms and words that innately form my image of the world, originating dialogues and connections that I perceive as the natural ways of contact with reality.

Johannes Kepler, German mathematician, claims that intuition is what rouses a mathematical view of things. Likewise, intuition is what wakes the aesthetic perception that drives the artist to determine the definitive shape of a piece. Under this perspective, mathematics and art would be two different languages mediated by the same intuition, which brings me to think about wider borders for lan- guage, where each one of us, as individuals, possesses the potential to create completely different and original ways of expression. I say potential because our development is not simple enough to put it only in formal terms, and not all of us get to develop our own language in a way that is recognized by our peers. In art, it is the development of that potential that allows an artist to call himself that, as well as, obviously, many other factors related to their culture, origin, personality, relationships, etc.

The artists gathered in this exhibit all have in common that they are developing languages that, for L21, symbolize a critical point of view, from which they take a stance on reality and the present context. In the exhibit, these languages are stressed, they are distorted as they are interpreted, and they are transformed as we dialogue with each other. Each piece evokes different reactions, each voice unchains a series of situations sometimes strongly linked to the impossibility of apprehending reality, or viewed from a different angle, to the deterioration of living in a fictional world. When I enter an exhibit room, I don’t expect to gaze through a homogeneous space of subtle connections, instead I expect it to completely dislodge my natural and intuitive logic, to make place to the emergence of other forms of vision beyond what we know. Some of the exhibited pieces are formally minimal, with little use of color and extreme simplicity, others are casual and explosive, with strident colors. In many of them the presence of shapes and objects repurposed from their usual functionality make me think in the transvestism of languages, in their capacity of being two at the same time, recognizing their original condition, and not without some erotism and perversion, seducing us with their new contextual display.

Most languages, if not all of them, exist to measure the world and at first are always reductive, they try to convey a large amount of information with the least amount of words and digits possible to later expand their meaning. In contemporary art this happens naturally, the artist creates, borrows or marks an object, performs an action or leaves clues of things it’s constantly doing along it’s path around the world, that’s why I consider them to be the resulting forms of all these artistic signs, one of the most potent and effective linguistic expressions to alter and with it transform our vital conditions.

LANGUAGE gathers the languages of seventeen artists, with a number of completely opposed innate sensitivities, combining both mathematical and aesthetic intuition, both logical and symbolic, in the creation of works that question the politics of representation and the language of art itself. Now it’s the time to restart the path that goes from one art piece to another. They have been set as clues, as letters that eventually form words and, in turn, a text, or maybe numbers, that combined into a spe- cific mathematical operation can clear the way to realities never seen before.

Carolina Castro Jorquera

Curator and investigator

San Felipe, Chile

EN / ES