ART CITIES:Venice-Armin Linke
Armin Linke is a multi-media artist working in video, photography, sound, interactive installation spaces and design, combining different mediums to blur the border between fiction and reality. His body of work analyzes the formation of our natural, technological, and urban environment and investigates how mankind uses technology and knowledge to transform and develop the Earth’s surface. His films and photographs are observations of the changes humans have made to the land, oceans, and biosphere.
By Efi Michalarou
Photo: Tba 21 Archive
Marking the culmination of a three-year research project with TBA21–Academy, Armin Linke’s exhibition “Prospecting Ocean” presents a rich multimedia footage and archival materials exhibited in the former headquarters and laboratory spaces of the Institute of Marine Sciences (CNR-ISMAR), including several multi-channel video installations and a new series of photographs. A montage of rarely seen images of the ocean floor, captured by remotely operated underwater vehicles (ROV) at a depth of up to 5,000 meters, visually juxtaposes the “natural” seabed with the machinery used to extract resources such as deep-sea minerals. Legally defined as common heritage of humankind, these so-called resources have formed over millions of years; deep-sea vents are considered the location of the origin of life. From highly detached images of machinery and clinical incisions in the seabed to assemblies at the UN and infrastructural apparatuses, Linke exposes submarine sites that are commonly invisible and accesses the meetings of decision makers that are usually closed off to the public. Scrutinizing the institutions administrating the seabed, Linke deconstructs the idea of a marine-based blue economy and policy commonly supported by governments. In the space of the exhibition, the footage filmed by Linke and his team* is presented alongside behind-the-scenes interviews of leading biologists, geologists, and policymakers, as well as footage of activist movements in Papua New Guinea, inviting the viewer to consider the implications of deep-sea mining and other excavations on both the environment and communities. Linke lays bare an intricate network of dynamics, dissecting how information is negotiated between scientific, legal, and economic entities and institutions, on both local and international levels. “Prospecting Ocean” also features a selection of primary documents and books from the CNR-ISMAR historical library selected by the institute’s scientists and critical texts analyzing the legal, political, and economic infrastructures presiding over the allocation of ocean resources. Taken together, the project scrutinizes the administration of the oceans and exposes the simultaneous fascination with and alienation from technologies that map, visualize, and exploit resources in the sea.
* The project has been realized in collaboration with: Giulia Bruno (camera, editing), Giuseppe Ielasi (sound, editing), Renato Rinaldi (sound), Kati Simon (project management).
Info: Curator: Stefanie Hessler, Istituto di Scienze Marine (CNR-ISMAR), Riva dei Sette Martiri 1364, Venice, Duration 23/5-30/9/18, Days & Hours: Wed-Sun 11:00-19:00, www.tba21.org & www.ismar.cnr.it