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DAN STOCKHOLM "THE DIG" 📷


  • R E I T E R Galleries, Potsdamer Straße 81 B Berlin, Berlin, 10785 Germany (map)
Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019. Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019. Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Pressemeddelelse, august 2019

In The Dig Dan Stockholm adopts the role of a creative archaeologist, utilizing methods of excavation, preservation and display in the creation of several new works. The Dig speculates on how we tend to view history as a straight line that leads from the past directly to us. In archaeology we dig to uncover ourselves, but is it us that we find, or were we someone else?

Earth remembers everything. Layers upon layer of dirt record the passage of time like the concentric circles of a tree. Dan Stockholm departs from this consideration of a layered consciousness to produce work that is generative in its nature. Born out of previous series, his most recent body of work testifies to a continued interest for earth’s rich semiotic field – a material that prior to being fired into a fixed and fragile object is endlessly flexible and malleable. In his handling of clay, Stockholm yields new considerations of our relationship to the ground below us and to the sky above.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019. Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019. Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, TERRA FORM III, 2019. Plaster, soil, roots, plants, steel.98 x 69 x 65cm. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, TERRA FORM III, 2019. Plaster, soil, roots, plants, steel.98 x 69 x 65cm. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, TERRA FORM VI, 2019. Plaster, soil, roots, plants, steel.233 x 80 x 80 cm. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, TERRA FORM VI, 2019. Plaster, soil, roots, plants, steel.233 x 80 x 80 cm. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019. Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019. Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Stockholm digs. In his new series Terra Form he makes use of this method used in archaeology, he terraforms the excavated space as a record of his initial performative action. In his process of creation – defined by the act of preservation – the artist inverts the image by casting directly into the ground and presents the negative form created from his original gesture.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019. Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019. Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, Seelenloch, 2019. Plaster, soil, roots, plants, wire. 70x68x8cm. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, Seelenloch, 2019. Plaster, soil, roots, plants, wire. 70x68x8cm. Photo: psftca.com.

Vessel nr. 11. 2019 Plaster, clay. H 22cm Ø 22cm. Photo: Dan Stockholm.

Vessel nr. 11. 2019 Plaster, clay. H 22cm Ø 22cm. Photo: Dan Stockholm.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019. Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019. Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Vessel nr. 19. 2019 Plaster, clay. H 27cm Ø 32cm. Photo: Dan Stockholm.

Vessel nr. 19. 2019 Plaster, clay. H 27cm Ø 32cm. Photo: Dan Stockholm.

Dan Stockholm, Vessel nr. 20, 2019. Plaster, steel, clay. Each 45x35x18cm. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, Vessel nr. 20, 2019. Plaster, steel, clay. Each 45x35x18cm. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019, Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019, Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, Vessel nr. 15, 2019. Plaster, clay. H 80cm Ø 44cm. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, Vessel nr. 15, 2019. Plaster, clay. H 80cm Ø 44cm. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, Vessel nr. 15, 2019. Plaster, clay. H 80cm Ø 44cm. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, Vessel nr. 15, 2019. Plaster, clay. H 80cm Ø 44cm. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019, Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019, Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, Vessel nr. 16, 2019. Plaster, clay. H 52,5 Ø 37cm. Photo: Dan Stockholm.

Dan Stockholm, Vessel nr. 16, 2019. Plaster, clay. H 52,5 Ø 37cm. Photo: Dan Stockholm.

Dan Stockholm, So below, 2019. Plaster, clay, steel. 117x21x5cm. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, So below, 2019. Plaster, clay, steel. 117x21x5cm. Photo: psftca.com.

Metaphorically, the process of digging functions as a way to go back in time. He is drawn to objects found in the ground as markers of ancient civilizations. These objects are a a reminder of how our species used to be more in sync with the cosmos and how we used to live more closely to the ground below. Before we began covering it with rigid asphalt, before we started ascending into increasingly tall buildings, we used to dirty our feet and hands in the ground as an auspicious ritual of cultivation. The ground was sacred because we understood that it fed us. Nowadays, the earth suggests little more that the sinister pledge of a final destination.

Dan Stockholm, Vessel nr. 13, 2019. Plaster, clay, steel. 55x27x17cm. Photo: Dan Stockholm.

Dan Stockholm, Vessel nr. 13, 2019. Plaster, clay, steel. 55x27x17cm. Photo: Dan Stockholm.

Dan Stockholm, Untitled, 2019. Plaster, clay. 31x15x2,5cm. Photo: Dan Stockholm.

Dan Stockholm, Untitled, 2019. Plaster, clay. 31x15x2,5cm. Photo: Dan Stockholm.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019, Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019, Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

His process of creation is a way to document and draw attention to our bodies. There is something metaphysical in creating an imprint of the body that points to a togetherness with nature and to consciousness through and within matter. In this way, his work is profoundly spiritual. That is perhaps best conjured through the series Vessels in which Stockholm fossilizes the movements of the body as he works with clay – a material capturing and remembering every step of his process.

Untitled, 2019 . Porcelain casting slip, glaze. 32x30x6 cm. Photo: Dan Stockholm.

Untitled, 2019 . Porcelain casting slip, glaze. 32x30x6 cm. Photo: Dan Stockholm.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019, Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019, Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019, Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm, The Dig, 2019, Installation view, R E I T E R Berlin prospect. Photo: psftca.com.

Dan Stockholm’s work is about the transformation of his materials of predilection, earth, clay and plaster into powerful apparatuses of transmission and reception. Stockholm’s practice oscillates between the desire to conceal and disclose. His work shifts between inside and outside, negative and positive spaces while pointing simultaneously to natural occurrences and human intervention, to life and death, to the past and the future. Stockholm (re)constructs a visual landscape that is site specific and yet one with the planet and its histories – creating a human trace that is at once intimate and resolutely universal.

Exhibition period: June 20 to August 24, 2019.

Earlier Event: June 19
WU TSANG "DIVERSITY IS REALITY"
Later Event: June 20
REWORK "THE WORK OF LIVING LABOUR"