Haptic Feedback

Haptic Feedback

Charlottenstraße 24 Berlin, 10117, Germany Saturday, January 18, 2020–Saturday, February 29, 2020 Opening Reception: Friday, January 17, 2020

Group exhibition with works by Walead Beshty, David Hartt, Carolyn  Lazard, Maria Loboda, Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle, Jean-Luc Moulène, Michael  Müller, Julia Phillips, Wilmer Wilson IV 

As  the first exhibition in 2020, Galerie Thomas Schulte presents a group  exhibition featuring works by nine artists who explore our changing  perceptions of reality, identity, and a shift in mental space.

Haptic  Feedback deals with the changing psychological relationship to physical  space and our sense of belonging and touch under the influence of  digital technologies. The exhibition was developed in collaboration with  the Philadelphia-based artist of the gallery, David Hartt. 

The term “haptic feedback” dates back to the late 1990s and was first  used by computer game developers who installed haptic technologies  within game controllers. These technologies create a tactile experience  by applying forces, vibration and movement to the user. Simple versions  are for example the vibrating of the phone in response to manual input  or the rumbling of the controller during computer games. Today however,  haptic feedback is understood more as a form of communication between  man and machine than a specific technological application. It involves  everything from the creation of a sense of presence to an emotional  connection and affects our well-being and how we explore and interact  with objects. At a time, when intimacy is increasingly defined by touch  screen interactions, the works in the exhibition can be seen as  explorations and as the reaffirmation of the importance of haptic  feedback in relation to our physical and bodily identity. 

JEAN LUC MOULÈNE’s (born 1955 in Reims, France) work Car Girl  Paris-Bolzano (2016) shows the absurd fusion of a female body and a car  into one, a perverse fulfillment of a Ballardian auto-erotic fantasy.  The work is made from a single marble block and gives a physical  presence to a collective and cultural imagination, simultaneously  utopian and dystopian. According to the artist’s own statement, his  objects are post-photographic, that is, they are essentially digitally  designed images that only exist as things in a second step. The  intersection, their shared space, is determined by the nature of volumes  overlapping. 

JULIA PHILLIPS (born 1985 in Hamburg, Germany) creates works that are  closely related to the body, questioning its social perceptions in the  context of gender, race and prevailing power relations. In the  exhibition, the artist shows the video Burdened (2018) in which Phillips  uses the body and its imprints or touches as artistic medium: “I am in  search of a physical language and mechanical metaphors to express  non-physical, emotional relationships.” 

Die Hütte (2013/2020) by IÑIGO MANGLANO-OVALLE (born 1961 in Madrid,  Spain) installed in the gallery’s Corner Space is a cube measuring 3,5 x  3,5 x 3,75 meters, clad in dark cedar wood. The wooden cedar panels  were charred using the old Japanese technique “Shou Sugi-Ban.” This  process creates a black and silver exterior that is resistant to  weathering and rot. Based on Martin Heidegger’s lecture “Building  Dwelling Thinking” from the 1950s, the work refers to his hut in the  Black Forest as well as to themes such as deforestation and the  ecological effects of contemporary culture and our relationship to  nature. The cube is both sculpture and architectural intervention, its  blackness both impossibly dense and an endlessly extending surface. 

The photograph by WALEAD BESHTY (born 1976 in London, UK) featured in  the exhibition is both an aesthetic object as well as a repository of  information about its own making. The work reflects Beshty’s interest in  rendering the process of the creation of the work of art transparent.  In his series Cross-Contaminated Inverted RA4 Contact Prints (2014) the  artist explores the complexity of creating photograms taken in the  darkroom without cameras. The colors, stains, and markings on the  surface of the work function as indexical signs within the printing  process, with external influences literally co-producing the work. 

In his work, MICHAEL MÜLLER (born 1970 in Ingelheim am Rhein,  Germany) repeatedly and in various media deals with the topics of  tactility, body and artistic production. The video work Mach dich selbst  (Do It Yourself) (2015) shows the artist’s hands, which alternately  gently model each other like objects. One hand forms the other, only to  become a living sculpture in itself. The hand that touches is being  touched. Subject and object become interchangeable. 

In his mixed-media work and live performances, WILMER WILSON IV (born  1989 in Richmond, USA) investigates representations of blackness in  public space—more specifically the treatment of black bodies as objects  of labor or desire, as well as the ever-present threat of violence. As  part of the exhibition the artist shows two works from a project he  began for the New Museum in New York in 2018, RID UM and Untitled (25$).  For these works, the artist gathered fliers and posters which he found  in the streets stapled to scaffoldings and telephone poles. Wilson  enlarges the photographic images and mounts them on plywood panels using  thousands of staples that form an opaque film or skin that covers and  conceals the images, protecting the subjects while also locking them  in—an act simultaneously violent and caring. 

Negative Space (2019) is a five meter-wide jacquard tapestry by DAVID  HARTT (born 1967 in Montréal, Canada). The work was produced from a  digital video still. In 2017, Hartt had travelled from Boston to Atlanta  capturing the territory—also known as the Northeast megalopolis—using a  drone camera. Hartt’s portrait of the landscape shows an extreme  concentration of wealth and power on the one hand and the displacement  of industry and the emergent precarity of environmental catastrophe on  the other. Translating the high-end digital photograph into the ancient  medium of tapestry, Hartt evokes the beginnings of the industrial age,  when automatic looms began to replace the human work force. Unlike a  photographic surface, that of the tapestry is densely present and its  rhetoric is not first of all concerned with the evanescence of light,  but with the physical surface—with the skin of things. 

CAROLYN LAZARD (born 1987 in Upland, USA) lives with a chronic  illness and uses their experience to examine concepts of intimacy and  the labor of living involved with chronic diseases. Their video  Consensual Healing (2018) takes the shape of a kind of fictional therapy  session, in which two disembodied voices take center stage, while the  screen for most of the video remains black. The conversation between the  two nameless individuals—one a therapist and hypnotist, the other the  narrating subject—is underscored by a mesmerizing electronic soundtrack  and addresses various themes including memory and trauma, shame,  co-dependency and “the weird and complicated decisions people make to  survive.“ The narrative is inspired by Octavia Butler’s science fiction  short story Bloodchild from 1995. 

MARIA LOBODA (born 1979 in Krakow, Poland) with her short instructive  wall texts spread across the exhibition space draws visitors’ attention  to various chemical components, traces of which may be found in the  atmosphere filling the exhibition space: While β-myrcene is a component  of the essential oil of various plants, including cannabis, lemon grass  and Verbena, 2,4,6-Trichloroanisole causes an unpleasant musky smell and  is often found around packaging materials treated with fungicides.  Thiomethanol occurs in the blood and brain of humans and animals, as  well as in plant tissues, but it is also found in certain foods, such as  nuts and cheese and is responsible for bad breath and the smell of  farts. 3,7-dimethyl-1,6-octadien-3-ol causes a floral almost spicy odor.  It is produced by over 200 species of plants, including birch trees and  cinnamon. Asking viewers to project their olfactory memory, Loboda  delineates an invisible, mental space.