Bloomberg SPACE

COMMA30 and COMMA31

Installation shots of the COMMA series at Bloomberg SPACE by David Jablonowski and Myriam Mechita.

COMMA30 and COMMA31

COMMA A dynamic new series of commissions enabling artists to experiment and expand their practice COMMA30 David Jablonowski COMMA31 Myriam Mechita Exhibition continues until 12 February 2011 Bloomberg SPACE 50 Finsbury Square London EC2A 1HD www.bloombergspace.com

COMMA 30 David Jablonowski As an artist, Jablonowski asks questions about the potential of communication in contemporary visual culture. Through sculpture and film, he explores the way language is established and developed and then reproduced technically in relation to political and historical discourse. For Jablonowski, ‘History has been produced and constructed by sign-constructions, which means that historical events, structures and processes are inseparably connected to their representation.’ For COMMA at Bloomberg SPACE, Jablonowski will transform the front gallery through a series of specially commissioned sculptures and film. The sculptures made from plaster, paper, and metal use a range of principles to establish form and positioning. They are surrounded by a web of moving images consisting of 4 sequences referring to semiotic history. The sculptures keep the viewer at a distance so they are unable to decipher the display’s immediate meaning. The repetitive and unsustainable promise of a valid direction of communication is expressed in the work which questions the contemporary understanding of sign systems; making us aware, not only of the transience of visual language, but also of the display systems at work. COMMA 31 Myriam Mechita Myriam Mechita’s installations function like a window into the artist’s dream, creating a fantastic visual universe. The work stimulates the spectator’s attention by soliciting the memory of her senses. Drawings are constructed from discontinued lines, wallpapers are made of thousands of patiently embroidered sequins, and her sculptures are created from encrusted pearls. Light is central to the work, and through intensely engaging our perception by multiplying mirrors, split images, palindromes and shapeless shadows, she builds on an illusion. Mechita’s new work for COMMA creates a landscape of sprawling murals and sculptures which take over the walls and floor of the back gallery. Her phantasmagorical world combines animals, skulls, mountains, and castles in ruins. It is a mythical world made contemporary. Her use of materials conveys an undeniable glamour and decadence: latex, glitter, coloured pearls and feathers are used alongside painted wood, and ceramic. About Bloomberg SPACE Bloomberg SPACE is a gallery based at Bloomberg’s European headquarters in London and is dedicated to commissioning and exhibiting contemporary art. It welcomes visitors six days a week and admission is free. COMMA continues with commissions including: 23 February – 26 March COMMA 32 Lidwien Van de Ven COMMA 33 Linda Quinlin Bloomberg SPACE, 50 Finsbury Square, London EC2A 1HD Open: Monday to Saturday 11am – 6pm Admission Free Nearest stations: Moorgate & Liverpool Street W www.bloombergspace.com E gallery@bloomberg.net T + 44 20 7330 7959
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Schirn Kunsthalle
ISCP
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KHSH
Moderna Museet
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