Exhibition

THE OPPOSITE OF WHAT WE NOW KNOW TO BE TRUE | ERIK LARSSON | ESMERALDA VALENCIA LINDSTRà 'M | HENNA VAINIO | VALà‰RIE KOLAKIS

26 Jan 2013 – 23 Feb 2013

Regular hours

Saturday
12:00 – 18:00
Wednesday
12:00 – 18:00
Thursday
12:00 – 18:00
Friday
12:00 – 18:00

Save Event: THE OPPOSITE OF WHAT WE NOW KNOW TO BE TRUE | ERIK LARSSON | ESMERALDA VALENCIA LINDSTRà 'M | HENNA VAINIO | VALà‰RIE KOLAKIS

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London, United Kingdom

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Dr. Melik: ' wheat germ, organic honey, and Tiger's Milk.'

Dr. Aragon: 'Oh, yes. Those are the charmed substances that some years ago were thought to contain life-preserving properties.'

Dr. Melik: 'You mean there was no deep fat? No steak or cream pies or, hot fudge?'

Dr. Aragon: 'Those were thought to be unhealthy - precisely the opposite of what we now know to be true.'

Dr. Melik: 'Incredible!'

Sleeper, 1973, Woody Allen

In the exhibition, The Opposite of What We Now Know to be True, the participating artists are asked to extend Dr. Melik and Dr. Aragons argument beyond hot fudge and cream pies, instead they are faced with the question; exactly what is life? Or perhaps, what is being? A question to which, one would imagine there to be little or no agreement. Yet there is a common urge for something animate - or almost animated - in the works of Valérie Kolakis, Erik Larsson, Esmeralda Valencia Lindström, and Henna Vainio.

In his 'Tool Analysis' Martin Heidegger suggests that only broken objects can truly be experienced for what they are. A tool only comes into being when it is broken, stripped from its functions and momentum. So when does a work of art come into being? One potential answer could be that a work only comes into being for those whom 'the question of being' is important. The artists in The Opposite of What We Now Know to be True seem to resist the notion of being and are instead caught up in Heidegger's dilemma, that mid-motion of being found, broken apart, and built anew.

The exhibition is not trying to answer whether a cigarette and pint will replace ginger tea with organic honey as the future remedy for a bad cold, as in Woody Allen's dystopia, but to emphasize the artists interest in - and augmentation of - the mundane, the used, or broken apart. From this there also is a need to revitalize and animate everyday life. The exhibition is asking us to consider that what is bad, or of no importance to us now, might in reality be quite good for us. As the title suggests, it is asking us to think about the opposite of what we now know to be true.

PRIVATE VIEW | 25th January | 6 - 9 pm

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