Group Show

SYNCHRONICITES

Project Info

Share on

Garden Party, 2022. Elza Sīle & Jonas Løland
Garden Party, 2022. Elza Sīle & Jonas Løland
Group show Synchronicities, Installation view, 2022
Group show Synchronicities, Installation view, 2022
Narcissus, 2022. Armands Freibergs
Narcissus, 2022. Armands Freibergs
Before Never, 2022. Uģis Albiņš
Before Never, 2022. Uģis Albiņš
Garden Party, 2022. Elza Sīle & Jonas Løland
Garden Party, 2022. Elza Sīle & Jonas Løland
Wail, 2022. Karlīna Mežecka
Wail, 2022. Karlīna Mežecka
Wail, 2022. Karlīna Mežecka
Wail, 2022. Karlīna Mežecka
Solo Walker Riga, 2022. Beate Poikāne
Solo Walker Riga, 2022. Beate Poikāne
Solo Walker Riga, 2022. Beate Poikāne
Solo Walker Riga, 2022. Beate Poikāne
Group show “Synchronicities”, Installation view, 2022.
Group show “Synchronicities”, Installation view, 2022.
Before Never, 2022. Uģis Albiņš
Before Never, 2022. Uģis Albiņš
Garden Party, 2022. Elza Sīle & Jonas Løland
Garden Party, 2022. Elza Sīle & Jonas Løland
Garden Party, 2022. Elza Sīle & Jonas Løland
Garden Party, 2022. Elza Sīle & Jonas Løland
Garden Party, 2022. Elza Sīle & Jonas Løland
Garden Party, 2022. Elza Sīle & Jonas Løland
Untitled, 2022. Eddie Wu-San
Untitled, 2022. Eddie Wu-San
Untitled, 2022. Eddie Wu-San
Untitled, 2022. Eddie Wu-San
Untitled, 2022. Eddie Wu-San
Untitled, 2022. Eddie Wu-San
Wail, 2022. Karlīna Mežecka
Wail, 2022. Karlīna Mežecka
Enigmatic waves of seriality are curving over the surface of the earth. While syncing objects into mysterious sequences, these waves are creating seemingly intertwined coincidences without a visible causal link. In these moments the so-called small-scale miracles occur, also known as "synchronicities". In the essay with the same title K.G. Jung mentions an occasion when a patient was recalling a dream about a necklace adorned with a pendant of a golden scarab. At that moment he was distracted by something softly scuffling by the window, which turned out to be a dung beetle with a greenish-golden shell – the closest possible insect to a scarab in these latitudes. Collecting coincidences also was a passion of the controversial biologist Paul Kammerer. The principle of what he called "serialities" are based on an unexplored, magnetic force of the macrocosm, striving to replicate, group and unify. However, J.P. Sartre's understanding of 'seriality' is something rather divergent. Accordingly, it is a distinct characteristic of capitalism, which manifests itself as collective inertia. Meanwhile, the original meaning of 'synchronicity' unfolds as somewhat superstitious, but if one thinks about it literally, it also seems obvious. Clearly there are many matching occurrences happening simultaneously. These events are untraceable, and it is certainly impossible to determine their ripple-effect. Infinite amounts of information filtered through inevitably selective processing can make the external image of the world fragmentary and ephemeral. Yet with an infinite number of variations and a wide range of interpretations, they do not eliminate the possibility that we do live in a network. The seeming binarism and principle of non-causal relation lies in aesthetic codes and toys with perceptual experience. Casting webs, falling into traps and collecting coincidences is not only a passion of disputable scientists, it's also an old trick used by artists that urges to group visual impressions associatively and allows representation to wrestle with its perception. To partly maintain the term's original mystical undertone, the ambivalent ‘synchronicities’ of this show are not only perceptible with active sight, but also with your 'gut feeling'. Uģis Albiņš’ 'Before Never' is embodying the potential of irreversible movements. By deconstructing the created mechanisms, the components of the object become symbolic. However, the essence of each object is abstract and infinite, inviting the viewer to perceive them candidly. Armands Freibergs draws from the visual strategies of classical painting and contemporary graphic design. His 3D digital painting is re-interpreting the modern day digital ‘Narcissus’, who gets distracted by its distorted optical image, inevitably drowning in the universe of binary codes. Karlīna Mežecka’s ‘Wail’ refers to the notion that the depths of our oceans are a larger mystery to man than outer space. Toying with the meaning and phonetics of the word, 'Wail' reveals vaguely zoomorphic shapes, captured in a state between familiar and alien. Elza Sile's & Jonas Løland's ambiguous “Garden Party” is revealing a syncing web between civilian leisure activities, animal traps and military techniques. With help of neatly applied associative visual strategies and ciphers, the installation is reminiscent of censorship and hiding in plain sight. Beate Poikāne's 'Solo Walker Riga' is displaying a psycho-geographical reconstruction of personal memory. Meanwhile seeking connections between Riga cityscapes and critical psychological states, the artist has found a resemblance in efforts of depicting a memory and attempting to write down a dream. Montage of the narrative depends on the viewer's chosen itinerary. Iveta Pole's & Krišjānis Elviks' 'Go Planet' performance in collaboration with Jana Jacuka reminds us of the digital reality in which 60's videos become the prime source of information – giving everyone the same odds of becoming a guru. The shared mix of images and fragmentary videos flow through users' minds, forming strange neo-tribes whose members may not even realize they have joined the community. Eddie Wu-San is an (un)known street photographer, capturing visual codes in image sequences. Each photograph is self-sufficient on its own and altogether informs the viewer of a web of information most often left unseen.
Žanete Liekīte

More KUBAPARIS