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Based on the fact that each digital image is represented by a numerical sequence,
Johannes Franzen operates directly with the
series of numbers and then transfers them back into the pictorial.
Ultimately, the exhibition “Minus 1” shows photo exposures
meandering between ornamentally repetitive structures, surprising
shape explosions, and seemingly random color noises.
Franzen works with a mathematical operation, which from image
to image he raises to a higher power. To this process he adds
another shift, minus 1 being the formula of the guerilla operation.
This minimal misalignment acts like an interference frequency,
disrupting the usual patterns of perception. The series of pictures
develops rhythmically, with strong references to each other, and
ends in exalted Picture 24.
One may have to assume a reference loss, since the link to the
usual image is missing. Then again, concerning the imaging of the
process, could these 24 works of “Minus 1” be even more indexical
than photographs of the conventional kind?
Practical Perception Critique yet again
While Franzen’s earlier cycles [1024
×
768] focused attention on the
constitutive basic elements of the digital space, and his following
series [4096
2
] accentuated the aspect (rather complementary than
contrastive, first appearance to the contrary) of Perception’s
ineluctable world
relatedness (intentionality), the artist in his
present works again reflects on the potentials and limits of the
perceptive process.
Minus 1 — the title of the series may be understood as a cipher
for Franzen’s approach. The invisibility of air, that specific opacity
which the normal operation of functioning processes sets free as the
first by
product, necessarily requires alienated, imaginative access
for its transfer into the area of the recognizable. To make trans
parent the all
too
transparent, this access has to happen in a proper manner
, i. e. following the constitutional logic of the pro
cess,
even strictly deriving from it, and yet not limited to it. Analogous
to the philosophical procedure of the determinate negation, artistic
practice here may be defined as a concrete displacement which
sets free the perception of the perception.
Suddenly — another recurring feature of Franzen’s work —
a series of quasi
me
taphysical questions arise on the horizon of
this self
reflection of the perceptual process: While the initial con
cern with the pixel as the constituent of the digital image space
had already brought to light (in passing, as it were) philosophical
concepts such as to
talit
y, con
tingenc
y and order, now repetition
and difference are suggesting themselves, in other words: the
category of the event.
In one of his “Images of Thought”, Walter Benjamin relates
that “the Hassidim have a saying about the coming world, which
goes: everything will be arranged there as it is with us. [...]
Everything will be as it is here — only slightly different.”*
Franzen’s works seek out this utopian potential in the normal
performances of the present.
michael wefers
*Walter Benjamin, Gesammelte Schriften, Band IV.1, S. 419 / Translated
from Walter Benjamin, Gesammelte Schriften, vol. IV.1, p. 419
Opening :
Friday, September 8, 2017 from 6 pm to 10 pm. the artist will be present the exhibition will be addionally open on Saturday and Sunday, September 9 and 10, 2017 from 11 am to 6 pm.
mpefm
GERMANY art press release
Opening hours :
Tue-Fri 12.00 -19.00 Sat 11.00 -16.00