VENICE.- The exhibition Pneuma Cosmic is based on a fictional research project that explores the manifestations of the air movement that permeates the entire world. Sectioned into three installations, the ensemble of works explores the artistic possibilities of representing airflow, drawing analogies between the physical phenomenon and the immaterial spiritual world.
Endre Koronczis exhibition Pneuma Cosmic presents the hypothesis of an all-pervading, invisibly vitalising, flowing driving force. The project combines the logic of scientific research with an artistic attitude as well as metaphorical ideas weaving the various concepts together. In the exhibited works, these two different approaches dissolve into presenting a conjecture rather than a proof.
The exhibition is composed of conceptual, ephemeral works that bring attention to the complexity of our intuitive experience of the environment. The elements of the ventilation system removed from the third floor of the listed building of the 200-year-old Hungarian Academy of Sciences, the video installation about the year-long walk to find the most important sigh, the breathing wall of the pavilion, and Máté Baloghs composition, the acousting element complementing the works, all examine the interaction between the transcendent world and nature. The project is characterised by slowness and contemplative observation combined with abstract, associative thoughts. Albeit poetic and philosophical in its language, the exhibition is closely linked to contemporary discourses on environmental aesthetics and environmental psychology. Repositioning the boundaries between the individual and the outside world may form a new kind of bond and responsibility towards our environment.
Endre Koronczi (1968) is an interdisciplinary artist living in Budapest. His art is characterised by conceptual thought and poetic sensitivity. In his works, he examines the interactions between the transcendent world and nature, as well as the dynamics of human relationships, everyday situations, and emotions. He started his career in the early 1990s with performances and self-painting pictures, then went on to create such significant long-term projects as Synchron, the BASIC Project, Extreme Sleeping, and Ploubuter Park. His art projects have been exhibited by the most prestigious institutions in Hungary, including the Hungarian National Gallery, the Ludwig Museum, and the Kunsthalle, as well as such international locations as Rio de Janeiro, Berlin, Prague, Vienna, and Rotterdam, among other places. He is a lecturer at Eszterházy Károly Catholic University.
Commissioner: Julia Fabényi / Organiser: Ludwig MuseumMuseum of Contemporary Art.