kaufmann repetto is happy to announce ‘! Hear Rings !’, Judith Hopf’s third solo exhibition at the gallery.
For her show at kaufmann repetto milano, the artist presents a new body of works including sculptures, installations and a four-minute video animation.
The exhibition aims to explore the modalities through which information circulate in the digital era. The artist investigates the way we receive and address digital data, and how we position ourselves towards such an endless flow of information. Nowadays our accounts are always connected, even if we turn off our computers. E-mails arrive at any time, and so do news – the internet does not know any closing hour. We are always “in line on-line,” while believing ourself to be off line.
When looked at from this point of view, Judith Hopf’s concrete cast Snakes seem to force a break in this ongoing newsfeed. In his Postscript on the Societies of Control, Gilles Deleuze defines the snake, with its physical flexibility, as a symbol of the society of control in which we live. Deleuze compares the serpent to the man of control who is “undulatory, in orbit, in a continuous network” – a person who is asked to be always ready for processes of constant physical and mental changes, in order to fit into society and its needs. Judith Hopf’s snake sculptures, however, become petrified in an ironic contrast: while showing their teeth and tongues, built out of printed emails and newspapers, the rest of their usually supple bodies look static and stuck somewhere in a system of endless variables provided by the net and its geometry.
While the “frozen” information have been sent from one gallery space to the other, a snake sneaks out from the wall in the second room where a group of brick stone sculptures are on view. With this new series titled Problem, the artist tries to find forms that are able to represent different stages of limitations occurring through the imagination of one-self being in a constant state of flux.
With the video animation ‘More’ (2015), also on view at the gallery, Judith Hopf seems to ask for a possibility of self-positioning while looking at the world through a bird-eye view perspective – a point of view provided by navigation systems such as Google Maps. Inspired by the film Powers of Ten by Ray and Charles Eames, Judith Hopf animates a zoom from outer space into an inner world, questioning if, through the use of modern technologies, we are actually enlarging or rather mining our understanding of distances and of other complex possible views of the world we live in.