Rafael Lozano-Hemmer
CERCANÍA
Arsenal Contemporary Art Montreal is pleased to host the internationally-acclaimed artist Rafael Lozano-Hemmer for a creative residency lasting three months. The Montreal-based Mexican artist and his team of 15 developers will be exhibiting recent works and developing new ones around the themes of proximity and shared experience. Ambitious, immersive audiovisual installations will transform one of Arsenal Contemporary Art Montreal’s 18,000 sq. ft. exhibition halls.
The title "Cercanía" means physical proximity in Spanish but also implies intimacy and empathy.
Despite its title, the exhibition is designed to respect social distancing: while some works are interactive, the visitors won’t need to touch any surfaces and will be able to keep a distance of at least 2 metres from others.
Comprising of three World premieres, three North American premieres and six Canadian premieres, this exhibition includes a 30 m long interactive projection room, a 2,300-channel sound sculpture, a computerized shadow play, as well as a water fountain that "draws" ephemeral portraits of people with cold water vapour. Guest artists will join Lozano-Hemmer's team in developing new pieces over the course of the residency, among them are singer/songwriter Patrick Watson and philosopher Brian Massumi.
The residency is a prospect of Atmospheric Memory, the acclaimed immersive exhibition that Lozano-Hemmer premiered at the Manchester International Festival, which will be presented at Arsenal Contemporary Art Montreal in the fall of 2021.
Rafael Lozano-Hemmer on Art During A Pandemic
“This residency emerges from the unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic. Originally we had planned to stage a massive time-based immersive exhibition at Arsenal Contemporary Art Montreal called “Atmospheric Memory”, featuring dozens of interactive artworks activated by the breath, touch and voices of the visitors. This project had to be postponed to next year and we decided to develop instead an activity designed specifically to respect social distancing and the best health and safety practices against the pandemic. We selected recent or new works that do not need to be touched (no buttons, levers or touch-screens) that allow at least two metres between visitors at all times and, critically, that can help us interrupt the narrative of the devastating virus by presenting connective artworks that stimulate an embodied and shared experience for both mourning and continuity.
With the continued devastation of COVID-19, experts have predicted that Museums will take years to recover, that crowded shows will be a thing of the past, that art will take place in online viewing rooms or VR, that we are effectively trapped in the glass jail of videoconferencing. I don’t agree: immunity, vaccines, treatments, prevention and testing will no doubt get us through this pandemic eventually, as they have before. In the near future we will hang out, embrace new friends, go vote, live shared experiences and make new relationships. We will be out in force, in solidarity, in protest, in mourning. The great American composer Frederic Rzewski proposed that “coming together” was at the very core of being human. As always, art will be the greatest reason for our bodies to share space: in concerts with others, in front of a painting that moves us, at an activist performance or immersed in a responsive environment. We have to plan now for this massive re-embodiment as if our life depends on it because it does, politically, aesthetically, psychologically, financially, environmentally.”
- Rafael Lozano-Hemmer