NEW YORK, NY.- Andreas Slominski's Sperm comprises the semen of humans and animals splashed on the walls and floors of
Metro Pictures. The theme of the exhibition is that of touch, specifically the moment sperm fuses with the ovum and fertilization occurs. As the foundation of existence, Slominski identifies touch as one of the most important forces in our world. Sperm represents both a shift in focus and continuation of Slominskis engagement with this notion of the instant of contact, which has been a key element in the traps that have been a signature aspect of his work for more than 25 years. The elaborate and often hidden processes that go into Slominskis exhibitions and works have long been the poetic and brutal crux of his practice.
In contrast to passive, static sculpture, Slominkis traps teem with latent energy. Once touched, that energy is released to make the traps explosive, active objects. Sperm disrupts codified notions of sculpture in a way similar to Slominskis traps, but where the traps replace marble or plaster as material, Sperm eliminates the tangible object. Additionally, in using sperm Slominski acknowledges the burgeoning ubiquity of imaged semena new development in the history of images, which only first appeared in so-called adult films in the 1970s but has proliferated since the onset of the internet. Sperm is Slominskis laconic elaboration on this expanded field.
Andreas Slominskis one-person exhibition Walls is on view through October 1 at Villa Schöningen, Potsdam, Germany. Other one-person shows include: Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt; Serpentine Gallery, London; Fondazione Prada, Milan; Museum Boijmans van Beuningin, Rotterdam; Deutsche Guggenheim Berlin; and Kunsthalle Zürich, Zurich. His work has been included in group shows at Museum Ludwig, Cologne; Witte de With Center for Contemporary Art, Rotterdam; and CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Art, San Francisco. He participated in the 2003, 1997 and 1988 Venice Biennales.
Special thanks to Cornell University Equine Research Park, Jacksonville Zoo and Gardens and South-East Zoo Alliance for Reproduction & Conservation.