Shin Gallery opens an exhibition of Brazilian artist Otavio Schipper


Artdaily- Shin Gallery is presenting an exhibition of Brazilian artist Otavio Schipper (b.1979). His works translate scientific research and concepts into diverse art forms that lead to a beautiful and impressive complexity between art and science. The central piece of the exhibition is the video work GOLEM, produced during Schipper’s stay at the Max Planck Research Center’s Artist-in-Residence program, in collaboration with New York City based musician and composer Sergio Krakowski (Brazil, b.1979).

A “Golem” is a figure from Jewish folklore, an animated anthropomorphic being that is magically created entirely from inanimate matter (specifically clay or mud). By reinterpreting the myth through a combination of scientific footage of microscopic organisms, bacteria and molecules, Schipper draws comparisons between these tiny, fungible building blocks of life and matter and the mythology of the Golem. Faint echoes of zeros and ones, the basis of computer code, provide a soundtrack to the video.

GOLEM is being displayed alongside Schipper’s drawing series Fluid Trajectory, diaphanous works that attempt to visualize the shape and movement of fluid through the organic interaction of watercolor and the paper’s surface. Schipper was inspired by the field of microfluidics and reproducing the effect of dancing droplets observed by scientists, in which individual droplets behave autonomously much like single-cell organisms. Paired together, these works represent a continuum of Schipper’s investigation into the very basics of form and matter. This is one of a multi-part collaboration between curator Lara Pan, Otavio Schipper, and Sergio Krakowski, exploring the intersections between art and science, beginning with Mechanical Unconscious in 2014.

Lastly, the gallery displays a “cabinet of curiosities,” populated with a series of ready-made objects inspired by inventions from the Industrial Revolution and dawn of the machine age. Otavio Schipper’s work connects past physical worlds with our present mental landscapes. By exhibiting his objects, the spectator can experience a spectrum of sensation ranging from enlightenment to nostalgia.

Artist Bios:
Otavio Schipper (Brazil, 1979) holds a degree in Physics from Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro. In 2017, he was artist-in-residence at KLAS (Knowledge Link through Art and Science), the artist-in-residence program of the Max Planck Society in Germany. Schipper has received the 2015 Fellowship from the Akademie der Künste Berlin and in the same year exhibited the installation Smoking Mirror at the Schering Foundation Project Space in Berlin. In 2014, he presented the installations Mechanical Unconscious at MOT International in London, Pocket Landscape at Galeria Millan in São Paulo, Elevator Music at die Raum in Berlin. Before that, he participated in the exhibition Mirror Images at the Kunstmuseum Thun (2016) and The Wizard’s Chamber at Kunsthalle Winterthur (2013) in Switzerland.

New York City-based musician and composer Sergio Krakowski (Brazil, 1979) has a prominent career as both a jazz instrumentalist and a contemporary sound artist. During his PhD in Mathematics, Sergio was able to create new technology that allows rhythm to be used as code to control computer generated audio and video. Applying these tools to his own career as a percussionist, Sergio performed his one-man show in myriad stages such as The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao and The Stone (NYC). The NY State Council of the Arts funded Sergio Krakowski to compose the piece “Talking Drums, conceived for Jazz trio and Electronics. It was presented at the Museum of Moving Image, as part of the NY Electronic Music Festival (2015).

Lara Pan is an independent curator that has worked internationally with artists such as Samson Young, Hans Breder, Trevor Paglen, Braco Dimitrijevic, Carolee Schneemann, and Wim Delvoye. Her present curatorial focus is on the intersections of art and technology. She is a contributing editor of Musée magazine. Her writing has appeared in numerous publications including ARTPULSE, RES, and artist catalogues.