lrjp: I am attracted to things that are capable  of transcending their own banality and materiality to become something  else, something more. I like the way that videotape is simultaneously  delicate and durable, since it’s meant to last. I can rip it easily with  my hands because it’s so thin, but I can also stretch it. Videotape is  made to present the world in color, but it appears purely black. It’s  supposed to be this safe container of the past, but it is destined to  vanish like a dinosaur, to become obsolete, pushed away by new  technologies. It’s a familiar mass-produced commodity, but it can be  surprisingly sensual and can look almost alive if set in motion. It can  be seen as a solid, thick, black line, but it can also disappear right  in front of your eyes if it’s turned on its side. So, to me, it’s not  just VHS tape but a rich sculptural material. It allows me to achieve  subtle perceptual effects, which I simply would not be able to achieve  with steel, stone, or any other material. I also like the play of the  artificial and the natural. Even though my work is made of industrial  materials, displayed under artificial light, and sometimes uses  artificial wind and electricity, I am going for something fundamentally  natural. Looking at one of my works can, I hope, be like watching a  flame or a running river. I want people to forget for a second what they  are looking at and inhabit a parallel world, where abstract things make  perfect sense as long as you are willing to take the time to look […]

lrjp: I am attracted to things that are capable of transcending their own banality and materiality to become something else, something more. I like the way that videotape is simultaneously delicate and durable, since it’s meant to last. I can rip it easily with my hands because it’s so thin, but I can also stretch it. Videotape is made to present the world in color, but it appears purely black. It’s supposed to be this safe container of the past, but it is destined to vanish like a dinosaur, to become obsolete, pushed away by new technologies. It’s a familiar mass-produced commodity, but it can be surprisingly sensual and can look almost alive if set in motion. It can be seen as a solid, thick, black line, but it can also disappear right in front of your eyes if it’s turned on its side. So, to me, it’s not just VHS tape but a rich sculptural material. It allows me to achieve subtle perceptual effects, which I simply would not be able to achieve with steel, stone, or any other material. I also like the play of the artificial and the natural. Even though my work is made of industrial materials, displayed under artificial light, and sometimes uses artificial wind and electricity, I am going for something fundamentally natural. Looking at one of my works can, I hope, be like watching a flame or a running river. I want people to forget for a second what they are looking at and inhabit a parallel world, where abstract things make perfect sense as long as you are willing to take the time to look []

32 ♥ / 3 months ago / Source: lrjp