The Metamorphosis of Power
Sammanfattning
Josefina Posch & Leslie Johnson’s collaborative artwork, “The Metamorphosis of Power”, part of the 2018 Tbilisi Triennial,
transforms an electric tram station in Gori Georgia into a solar powered sulpture.
Med stöd av
Valand Academy, Gothenburg University
Tbilisi Triennial, Georgia
Center for Contemporary Art -Tbilisi
Wilhelm & Martina Lundgrens Understödsfond
Embassy of Sweden in Tbilisi
Beskrivning av projektet
Josefina Posch and Leslie Johnson’s first collaborative artwork
“The Metamorphosis of Power” opened in Gori, Georgia
October 4 as part of the third Tbilisi Triennial. The artwork
responds to the specific situation of an electric bus transformer
station in central Gori behind Stalin Avenue.
Gori, the birthplace of Josef Stalin, is part of the ancient silk route significant not only for commercial trade but also knowledge exchange and communication. Closeby is Uplisciche, an ancient cave village and sun temple from 6000 BC. Gori, the windiest city in Georgia, is developing as a center for alternative energy such as wind and solar power. The artwork links together the development of wind and solar power as a transformation of the ancient silk trade route and historic power structures.
In “The Metamorphosis of Power” visitors meet a theatrical
spectacle of light, form, movement and sound. Shadows of the
forms of Bombyx mori,a silk moth which only lives one night,
pass by the windows, trapped in the building as they are drawn
to the light. The shadows, visible in the warm golden light are
cast on a transparent membrane sealing openings in the building: doors, windows and bullet holes from the 2008 war with Russia.
An LED trail of light leads the public to the backside of the
building with three rooms. Visible through barely open doors,
moth forms flicker here and there among piles of mortar and
scrap flooded with warm light in two of the rooms. In the
central room the sound of wind comes from behind a gigantic
cocoon suspended in violet light powered by a wind and
solar power turbine on the rooftop, symbolizing historic
political power in transition. The visible but mysterious insect movement and sound from within is experienced only from the outside of the building which is thus transformed into a sculpture.
During the installation of the work, Posch and Johnson, working
with local electricians, engineers and others, awakened the curiosity of the passing local public. They met students and teachers from the Gori art school, who gave feedback; and were interviewed on Gori TV, radio and by The Swedish
Embassy in Georgia. The exhibition “Metamorphosis of Power” was opened by Wato Tseretelli, curator for the Tbilisi Triennial, and the mayor Mr. Konstantine Tavzarashvili, as the spearhead of a plan to renovate the electric transformer station into a new cultural center.
Typ av arbete
Situation specific public sculpture
Offentliggjord i
3rd Tbilisi Triennial, Gori, Georgia
Länk till verkets webbplats
http://www.radiomosaic.ge/index.php/articles/item/2803-2018-10-05-08-20-58
http://www.dia.ge/?m=1&ID=13683
http://www.josefinaposch.com/work.php?work=1&image=1
https://www.facebook.com/CityHallofGori/photos/ms.c.eJxFjNsNwDAIxDaqgMvx2H~_xKiS0v5ZtLQGXljiKhD56ALXCsgQDnG3QLzDlNhI14DzW~;0B0kmuMM81vCosNwmIMSBs2CdiGV7xk3yJn.bps.a.1903541193062269/1903541906395531/?type=3&theater
http://cca.ge/node/175
https://www.facebook.com/EmbassyOfSwedenInTbilisi/videos/2170640629637578/?source=feed_text&__tn__=*NK-R
http://www.josefinaposch.com/work.php?work=1&image=13
www.lesliejohnson.info
Datum
2018-10-04Upphovsman
Johnson, Leslie
Posch, Josefina
Nyckelord
Situation specific art
video
sustainability
alternative energy sources
archives
research documentation
video
Tbilisi Triennial
Publikationstyp
artistic work