EXHIBITIONS

ECKE BONK

Opening 8 April 2011 at 7 pm
Exhibition from 9 April to 15 May 2011

A grand piano stands on a stage in the hall of the Kunstverein. Individual notes ring out from its interior, as if played by an invisible hand, enveloping the room in an idiosyncratic soundscape. The piano translates the strange ubiquitous radiation not perceptible by human beings. Geiger counters send the radioactive signals to the piano via a computer.

"Chaosmos Soundings II / Das Observatorium": Ecke Bonk uses a neologism from James Joyce's novel Finnegans Wake for the title of this installation, in which two etymologically contrasting concepts - chaos and cosmos - have been fused together. In ancient Greece cosmos meant a regulated whole, a conception that the natural philosopher Heraclitus distilled when he wrote: "The most beautiful cosmos is a heap of random sweepings."

Ecke Bonk's work addresses explanatory models from science, art and philosophy. Alongside the central sound installation, the Heidelberg exhibition presents a series of portraits of important physicists and natural philosophers, who have carried out pioneering research into the building blocks of the world. The portraits, ink-jet prints on canvas, portray people who have decisively influenced our physical world view and thus our perception of the world.

The exhibition takes place at the same time as the Ruprecht Karls University of Heidelberg, the oldest institution of academic and scientific research in Germany, celebrates its 625th anniversary. Scientific and academic research attempts to make advances into unknown territories. It develops systems of signs and classifications which can be used to structure and interpret the world. Ecke Bonk's oeuvre has the same objective in that it moves the invisible into the sphere of the perceptible and appeals to both scientists and artists to understand their work as a basic questioning of and challenge to the status quo.

"Chaosmos Soundings II / Das Observatorium" has been exhibited 2006 at the 3rd Echigo-Tsumari Art Triennial in Japan. Due to the recent events is published an open letter of the director of the triennial, Fram Kitagawa, below "further information".

Supported by:

The exhibition will be presented in the hall (ground floor) and on the gallery (first floor).

FURTHER INFORMATION

Download exhibition magazine in German (pdf)
Download press release in German (pdf)
Link images and work
Download exhibition labels in German (pdf)
Download open letter Echigo-Tsumari Art Triennial (pdf)

FRAME PROGRAMME

Fr 08.04.2011 | 19.00 | Opening. Greetings: Michael Sieber. Introduction: Susana Sáez

Sat 09.04.2011 | 19.00 | Short introductions on occasion of the "Long Night of the Museums".

Sun 24.04.2011 | 15.00 | Guided exposition tour

Sun 08.05.2011 | 15.00 | Guided exposition tour

Sat 14.05.2011 | 15.00 | "The whole cosmos is an unique observatory". Series of lectures about art and science on occasion of the exposition of Ecke Bonk. Greetings: Michael Sieber. Lectures: Prof. Peter Weibel, Director of the ZKM, Karlsruhe, Prof. Dr. em. Berthold Stech, Institute for Abstract Physics, Heidelberg. Following discussion moderated by Dr. Theo Steiner.

Sat 14.05.2011 | from 22.00 | Silentium - Night of the Observatory / Chaosmos Soundings II


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Heidelberger Kunstverein
Address | Heidelberger Kunstverein | Hauptstr. 97 | D-69117 Heidelberg
Mailing Adress | Heidelberger Kunstverein | Bauamtsgasse 3 I D-69117 Heidelberg
Phone | +49 6221 184086  Fax | +49 6221 164162  E-Mail | hdkv@hdkv.de
Opening Hours | Tu, We, Fr 12-19h, Thu 15-22h, Sat-Sun 11-19h