Language and login selector start
Language
Deutsch
English
Español
Français
Italiano
Language and login selector end
Solo show: "Der Mondbericht" (over)
31 January 2009 until 14 March 2009
 
Cornelia Schmidt-Bleek "Moon Museum", 2009, photo transfer / ceramic tile, 19,5 x 24,5 cm, photo: Jens Ziehe
 
  Galerie Kamm

Rosa-Luxemburg-Str. 45
10178 Berlin
Germany (city map)

Send E-mail
tel +49 (0)30 - 2838 6464
www.galeriekamm.de


An X-ray satellite conducting astronomical observation in the dark expanse of outer space has con-firmed that 99 percent of the universe is invisible and that 90 percent of this area consists of particles that have never before been seen on earth. This leaves a multitude of questions unanswered, a great many secrets undisclosed and numerous possibilities open.

In the exhibition Der Mondbericht (The Moon Report), Cornelia Schmidt-Bleek takes on a search for the invisible. Drawing upon her family’s scientific lineage, she researches and classifies the world in her very own manner. The starting point for this exhibition was a scientific study written by the artist’s grandfather, Karl Georg Schmidt, entitled Der Mondbericht, which was published in 1949. This book focused on the relation between continental drift and the formation of the moon. For quite some time a revolution had been occurring at the microscopic level. Miniscule bits smaller than the naked eye could see were discovered with the help of refined instruments and theories, opening up new worlds of unbelievable dimensions to human perception. With the aid of micro and macro-optics in photogra-phy, the landscape of the invisible greatly expanded.

In the work of Cornelia Schmidt-Bleek, too, the moon becomes an experimental plane. These pieces are based on light, dust, darkness, knowledge and the possibilities of their representation. The artist examines the relationship between photography and drawing, two artistic techniques which have played a significant representational role in the field of the natural sciences. In the piece Firsoff: Stage III, Cornelia Schmidt-Bleek plays on Swedish physicist V.A. Firsoff’s cartographic studies of the moon. As an amateur scientist, Firsoff created the so-called Moon Atlas in 1961, which deliberately employed the medium of drawing as opposed to photography as means to depict the landscapes of the moon’s surface. In the form of a large series of photograms, Cornelia Schmidt-Bleek refashions this primary source using sand and salt, creating landscapes which become, in turn, unique photo-graphs. Another work uses the lens and light of a slide projector to enlarge basalt dust, a material used by NASA as an imitation of moon dust. The mystical, abstract image cast onto the wall likens a moon landscape.

The entryway to the gallery forms a cabinet of moon legends and curiosities: a tile containing a chip ostensibly smuggled to the moon, in which are embedded works by artists such as Rauschenberg and Oldenburg. A glass engraving which cites Man Ray’s Dust Breeding, a photograph depicting a detail of Duchamp’s Large Glass after it had been left to gather dust for one year. In addition to this: photo-booth pictures in which Fred Whipple’s images of moon crescents are playfully recombined. In a small series of work, the artist ties the Mare Orientale– a partially visible, partially invisible area of the moon– to the pineal gland, the area in the human brain responsible for the rhythm of day/night and light/dark, which Descartes designated as the seat of the soul.
Thus Cornelia Schmidt-Bleek creates a web of anecdotes and free associations that play upon factual knowledge and open a view onto the surface of the moon which is no longer scientifically verifiable.

  • Artfacts.Net - your experienced service provider

    Since its start in 2001, Artfacts.Net™ developed a sophisticated artist database through its collaboration with international art fairs, galleries, museums and artists.

Red Dot Miami
St-Art
AQUA ART FAIR Miami
Singapore International Art Fair
Contemporary Istanbul
Edge Zone Art Fair
scope miami
Revista de Arte - Logopress
dEmo