AUTOMATIC - Auto Italia & Pallas Projects
I walk into the large open room, something occurs independently of volition or control. A certain muscular action, involuntary. I dig the heels of my hands hard into my eyes. Milky spots, pinpoints of light… A pinhole camera, erected at Lake St. Clair, Tasmania, constructed in an attempt to simulate a comet. A sculptural soundtrack, invisible spheres of sound, floating between a suspended ventilation system transforming the gallery’s air. A series of found objects, acted upon and left as a sort of carcass in the aftermath of the event. An assemblage of shimmering intentionalities.
Automatic is a two-part international group show of works that confront and insinuate themselves with the viewer. Attempting to question what might be innate or instinctual, each artist works within our daily experiences that lie beyond conscious decisions. Automatic explores contemporary art practices of temporary consolidations, cumulative processes that condense before dispersing. Presenting work that stretches out to the viewer with an immediacy that points beyond itself, Automatic sketches out the persistent, ghostly sensory circuit between the artist, artwork and audience.
Curated by artist Gavin Murphy and curator and critic Chris Fite-Wassilak, Automatic opens at Auto Italia (London) before being reconfigured for Pallas Projects (Dublin). A free publication with an essay by the curators will be available for the exhibition.
Exhibition
Karl Burke (IE), Alicia Frankovich (NZ), Candice Jacobs (GB), Gereon Krebber (DE), Ruth Proctor (GB), Linda Quinlan (IE), Berndnaut Smilde (NL).
Curated by Gavin Murphy & Chris Fite-Wassilak
Auto Italia South East, London
September 2009
Exhibition Link
Pallas Projects, Dublin
October–November 2009
Exhibition Link
Publication
Automatic
Gavin Murphy (ed.)
Text by Gavin Murphy & Chris Fite-Wassilak
24 pages, 2-colour, designed by Oran Day
Published to coincide with the two-part exhibition Automatic
Copies limited, contact editor
Essay PDF
Funded by The Arts Council, Culture Ireland, Dublin City Council, Mondriaan Fonds, Goethe Institut