CHICAGO, IL.- This major commission by Los Angeles-based artist Mathias Poledna marks the
Renaissance Societys final presentation in the institutions first 100 years.
For his project Poledna proposes the notion of iconoclasm and its various historical contexts as a conceptual backdrop for two new works: a 35mm film installation, co-produced with the Renaissance Society and presented here for the first time, and a substantial alteration to the gallery space: the demolition, dismantling and removal of the gallerys ceiling structure, a steel truss grid that had horizontally bisected the double-height gallery since 1967.
The grid has been an emblematic presence in the Renaissance Societys exhibitions since the institution moved to its present location in 1979. It has been employed to stabilize temporary walls, hang lighting, and run electricity, and it is conspicuous in much of the museums photographic documentation from the last 35 years. The invitation to Poledna to undertake this exhibition came during a period of transition for the Renaissance Society, during which the institution was questioning the possibilities of the exhibition space. The grids removal is the outcome of a sustained dialog between the artist and the Renaissance Society, whose interest in the structure stems from its status as a tool both practical and aspirational, and its role in the iconography of the institution. Its removal, then, being both a work of art but also part of a long term-curatorial re-assessment, creates a break in the Renaissance Societys history, literally and metaphorically transforming the space within which the institution will operate as it enters its second century.
Polednas new 35mm film work, Substance, contemplates the material properties and frames of vision of a highly recognizable luxury commodity in a series of extremely close-range and slow tracking shots. A portrait as well as a moving-image still life of heritage-brand golden watch, the films modes of representation oscillate throughout thus undermining any stable point of view. The films sound is comprised of an re-edit, referring to the practice in popular music of distilling, extracting and repeating elements of an existing track in order to maximize its use value, typically for a dance setting.
Together, the works foment a multi-layered conversation between histories of the site; concepts of public space and private property; and the paradoxical legacies of historicism and modernism in architecture and design. More broadly, the exhibition reflects Polednas ongoing interest in the production and circulation of images within spectacle.
Mathias Poledna (b. 1965, Vienna) lives and works in Los Angeles. Recent solo exhibitions include the Austrian Pavilion at the 55th Venice Biennale (2013); at Secession, Vienna (2013); A Village by the Sea at Galerie Buchholz, Berlin (2013); and Mathias Poledna/Florian Pumhösl at Raven Row, London (2011). Group exhibitions include Sydney Biennale, Sydney, Australia (2014); What is to come has already arrived, at Centro Andaluz de Arte Contemporáneo, Sevilla (2014); and Figures and Prefigurations at City Gallery Prague (2013).