Gravity's Rainbow, 2017
Gravity’s Rainbow
Exhibition: 6th — 28th May 2017
Coleman Projects is pleased to announce a solo exhibition by Katrin Hanusch.
Gravity’s Rainbow, the title of the exhibition, is a novel as famous for the author’s in-your-face structural stance as the outlandish sexual exploits of his literary protagonists, including a man whose cock appears to opperate as a divining rod for military rocket impact sites. With this solo show of objects and moving images, Katrin Hanusch appears to connect with author Thomas Pynchon’s dark humor and highly orchestrated sense of pinballing between the profundity and pointlessness of it all.
The world of men — the macho materiality of weaponry and the male history of sculpture (and of pilfering cultural objects) — is very much present in these works, but at no point does one get the sense that Hanusch actually wants to bludgeon her audience with a blunt ‘message’. Rather, her irreverent treatment of motifs and matter reveals as much about the innate sensuality of ancient and modern, precious and throwaway things as the basic human urges — sex, violence, consumption — that likely brought them into being and continue to feed their appropriation.
If there’s a conceptual space Hanusch wants to take us to, it’s one, if not exactely fraught with, then humorously full of contradictions. Her magazine-girl-hand-with-club.gif is, at points, as physically annoying as it is modishly easyon the eye: as the tempo speeds up, the veins of the wrist and grooves of the ‘artefact’ appear to combine with porno theatricality. Bronze and aluminium ‘future fossils’ dressed in underwear and neon tubing stir up dusty recollections of time — as experienced in the museum and on the dancefloor. The gallery appears as much a Mighty Boosh-style set for a play about recycling as a hallowed venue in which to consider objecthood. One person’s weapon, or prized possession, Hanusch seems to say, is another’s fashion accessory or sex toy.
Katrin Hanusch, a recent graduate of the Royal College of Art lives and works in London. She has been the recipient of several fellowships and awards including Emerging Artist Residency Award, Scottish Sculpture Workshop, Lumsden, and recently completed a fellowship at Chelsea College of Art Foundry.
Coleman Projects
94 Webster Road
London SE16 4DF
www.colemanprojects.org.uk
Exhibition: 6th — 28th May 2017
Coleman Projects is pleased to announce a solo exhibition by Katrin Hanusch.
Gravity’s Rainbow, the title of the exhibition, is a novel as famous for the author’s in-your-face structural stance as the outlandish sexual exploits of his literary protagonists, including a man whose cock appears to opperate as a divining rod for military rocket impact sites. With this solo show of objects and moving images, Katrin Hanusch appears to connect with author Thomas Pynchon’s dark humor and highly orchestrated sense of pinballing between the profundity and pointlessness of it all.
The world of men — the macho materiality of weaponry and the male history of sculpture (and of pilfering cultural objects) — is very much present in these works, but at no point does one get the sense that Hanusch actually wants to bludgeon her audience with a blunt ‘message’. Rather, her irreverent treatment of motifs and matter reveals as much about the innate sensuality of ancient and modern, precious and throwaway things as the basic human urges — sex, violence, consumption — that likely brought them into being and continue to feed their appropriation.
If there’s a conceptual space Hanusch wants to take us to, it’s one, if not exactely fraught with, then humorously full of contradictions. Her magazine-girl-hand-with-club.gif is, at points, as physically annoying as it is modishly easyon the eye: as the tempo speeds up, the veins of the wrist and grooves of the ‘artefact’ appear to combine with porno theatricality. Bronze and aluminium ‘future fossils’ dressed in underwear and neon tubing stir up dusty recollections of time — as experienced in the museum and on the dancefloor. The gallery appears as much a Mighty Boosh-style set for a play about recycling as a hallowed venue in which to consider objecthood. One person’s weapon, or prized possession, Hanusch seems to say, is another’s fashion accessory or sex toy.
Katrin Hanusch, a recent graduate of the Royal College of Art lives and works in London. She has been the recipient of several fellowships and awards including Emerging Artist Residency Award, Scottish Sculpture Workshop, Lumsden, and recently completed a fellowship at Chelsea College of Art Foundry.
Coleman Projects
94 Webster Road
London SE16 4DF
www.colemanprojects.org.uk
Installation shots from the exhibition.
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Photos @Katrin Hanusch
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Photos @Katrin Hanusch