SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- The Contemporary Jewish Museum (The CJM) will soon present Mika Rottenberg: Spaghetti Blockchain, a major solo exhibition by the New York-based artist on view May 18October 22, 2023. The exhibition brings together Rottenbergs most prominent video, installation, and sculptural works from the past decade, which playfully reveal that life in a globalized economy is more bizarre than we can possibly imagine. The exhibition, which is curated by CJM Senior Curator Heidi Rabben, marks the first museum survey of the artists work ever to be presented on the west coast.
The exhibition will include Rottenbergs three most recent immersive video installationsNoNoseKnows (2015), Cosmic Generator (2017), and Spaghetti Blockchain (2019)as well as a series of related kinetic and interactive sculptures. On the occasion of the exhibition, The CJM will also co-present an offsite screening of Rottenbergs very first feature-length film, REMOTE (2022) on September 9, 2023 at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) in the Phillis Wattis Theater. After the screening the artist will be joined in conversation by Christopher Bedford, Helen and Charles Schwab Director of SFMOMA.
Rottenberg often uses the term social surrealism to describe her visionary approach to artmaking, implying that embracing the bizarre in her work serves to reveal just how disorienting aspects of contemporary reality often are. Each of Rottenbergs primary video works is situated within a theatrical installation, featuring items as disparate as sacks of pearls, inflatable pool toys, and plastic flowers. In Spaghetti Blockchain (2019), Rottenberg creates an autonomous sensory meridian response (ASMR) environment inside the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) Large Hadron Collider, exploring the scientific connection between human- and machine-produced sensation. With her video work Cosmic Generator (2017) Rottenberg offers an analogy between migration issues and the large-scale production and circulation of goodsunderscoring the illogical nature of a society that favors and facilitates the entry of cheap objects but restricts the movement of human beings. In NoNoseKnows (2015), a subversive allegory of labor practices filmed in Zhejiang province in China, Rottenberg manifests the imagined dynamics between a pearl factory and its Western supervisor, who, with every sneeze, inexplicably produces a plate of pasta.
A selection of sculptural works that blur the line between humans, machines, and nature both complement and complicate the video narratives on view. With these works, Rottenberg explores the physical and metaphorical distance between human labor and mechanical production. Isolated bodily extremities like elaborately manicured fingers comingle with gears, cranks, and live plants to create a Rube Goldberg-like array of delightfully futile mechanisms. Some appear automatic or almost sentient, while others require the labor of visitors to activate them, further immersing and implicating them in the process.
Born in Buenos Aires in 1976, Rottenberg spent her formative years in Israel then moved to the U.S., where she earned her BA from the School of Visual Arts in New York and followed this with an MFA at Columbia in 2004. Rottenberg has been the recipient of prestigious prizes including the 2019 Kurt Schwitters Prize and the 2018 Smithsonian American Art Museums James Dicke Contemporary Artist Prize. Her work is represented in numerous major museum and public collections including the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Brooklyn Museum, National Gallery of Canada, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, and Tel Aviv Museum of Art, and Rose Art Museum. and Roselyne C. Swig.