Dane Mitchell

All Whatness is Wetness


12.06.15 – 18.07.15 | Opening June 13th 2015, 5 - 8 PM

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PRESS RELEASE
 
Dane Mitchell. All Whatness Is Wetness
June 12 – July 18, 2015
Pfingstweidstrasse 23 / Welti-Furrer Areal, 8005 Zürich
Opening reception: Saturday June 13, 5–8 pm
 
Dane Mitchell's second exhibition at RaebervonStenglin, 'All Whatness is Wetness', springs a phenomenological encounter on his viewers. Art is to be experienced not as a discrete object but as an unpredictable wetness: a room in which vapour is both present and ever-vanishing. This vaporous sculptural form is always in flux, yet presents an eternal phenomenon, as old as the earliest beginnings of life.
 
Labelled bottles explain the provenance of the water: the Maeander River (now known as the Büyük Menderes, and from which the word 'meander' comes) that winds its way through Asia Minor until reaching the Aegean Sea at what was once the Ancient Greek town of Miletus. There the Milesian school philosopher Thales (c. 624 – 546 BC) hypothesised that the nature of all matter derives from a single primordial substance — water. This notion that “all whatness is wetness'' represents the beginnings of scientific philosophy, for the first time rejecting mythological explanations of natural phenomenon for a rational investigation into matter.
 
That the Maeander should, several millennial later, take a detour to a gallery in Zürich is the result of a quest undertaken by the artist, who has already meandered from as far as New Zealand. Mitchell bottled the water from the river, flew it to Switzerland and then applied the homeopathic method to it, which relies on the principle that water can hold memory and that through a specific process of dilution and succussion any remnants of the original river exists purely through memory rather than molecule. According to the principles of homeopathy, the dilution strengthens rather than weakens the potency. By way of an ultrasonic humidifier located under the gallery floor, this water is exhaled as vapour from a drain running along the back of the gallery to be experienced according to the viewer's vantage point and associations: as a shifting form to be peered down on, walked through, inhaled or glimpsed from afar; and as suggestive of geothermal activity, a spectral apparition, or steamily suggestive of cinematic images.
 
Accompanying this protean wetness there will be brass sculptures, which neatly embody the concepts of the previous room in the form of simple Venn diagrams; while in the back space, the undiluted waters from the Maeander River are contained at rest within a piece of scientific glass tubing, its curved form suggestive of a meandering line.
 
Science, homeopathy, history, natural phenomena, allegory and symbolism all collide in Mitchell's installation, which plays on the viewer's mind as much as it invades the body through physical spectacle. For over a decade the artist has explored phenomena on the edge of one's perception, previously working with dust, scent, bacteria and occult practices, looking beyond conventional media to probe the limits of knowledge. Operating on the thresholds of the rational and irrational, the visible and invisible, his work looks beyond an anthropocentric understanding of the world, locating life and memory in matter itself.
 
 
 
Dane Mitchell was born in 1976 in Auckland, New Zealand. He received his Bachelor of Visual Arts from Auckland Institute of Technology, New Zealand, and a Master of Philosophy from Auckland University of Technology. His recent solo exhibitions include 'Dane Mitchell', Christopher Grimes Gallery, Los Angeles, USA, 2014; 'Other Explications', Hopkinson Mossman, Auckland, New Zealand; 'Conservation of Mass', RaebervonStenglin, Zürich, Switzerland; and ‘Dane Mitchell' Sassa Trülzsch, Berlin, Germany (all 2013). His group exhibitions include: ‘Believe Not Every Spirit, But Try the Spirits’, Monash University Museum of Art, Australia, 2015; 'A Place Like This', Klontal Triennale, Kunsthaus Glarus, Switzerland; ‘A World Undone’, Auckland Art Gallery, New Zealand (both 2014); Gwangju Biennale 2012, South Korea;Liverpool Biennial 2012, United Kingdom. 



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