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Daiga Grantina at Kunstverein Hamburg

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Artist: Daiga Grantina

Exhibition title: Pillars Sliding off Coat-ee

Curated by: Rhea Dall

Venue: Kunstverein Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany

Date: January 28 – April 2, 2017

Photography: Fred Dott, all images copyright and courtesy of the artist, Kunstverein Hamburg and Galerie Joseph Tang , Paris

In cooperation with Neue Kunst in Hamburg e.V., the Kunstverein is pleased to present the young artist Daiga Grantina (*1985 in Riga, Latvia) with her first major solo exhibition in Germany.

Daiga Grantina sculpts voluptuous shapes from perforated and semi-transparent surfaces. Between apparent monumentality and frail lightness, Grantina’s organic sculptures drip, climb, or float through the exhibition space, seemingly undergoing constant metamorphosis of supposed opposite material states such as liquid and solid or soft and hard.

While thriving on a long list of sculptural and painterly positions, a particular reference for Grantina’s exhibition at the Kunstverein is the iconic painting The Mountain (1936-37) by the notorious French artist Balthus, whose characters she transferred to three-dimensionality and disassembled into amorphous shapes.

The voluminous sculptures function as organisms made of industrial materials and knick-knacks. PVC, ventilation pipes, iridescent wires, and cable ties assume allegorical functions as organs or bowels, referring to the technical augmentations of the body today. Spun as bundles between floor and ceiling, Grantina’s current series of works—the so-called Buffs—are cocoon-like bodies or exoskeletons, created from expanded elastane stiffened by a cover of liquid plastic.

Combining recent and new pieces, a focal point for this exhibition is its strong methodological reference to the manufacturing of the soft candy: Salt Water Taffy. According to scientist Otto Rössler, the machine producing this gluey all-American sweet the “Taffy Puller” is illustrating the rules of chaotic, fluid dynamics. The edible sugar bonbon is made by stretching a crystalline mass and re-layering this via a continuous rotation from surface to depth—installing air in its midst—each moment of the process being unique and unrepeatable. Inspiring the on-going coalescence of matter in her artistic practice, Grantina’s irretrievable gestures run in similar non-linear orbits. Instead of a traditional sculptural permanence or solidity, her pieces give (even after their creation) an impression of ceaseless transformation.

At the Kunstverein, Grantina’s matter subtly absorbs its surrounding exhibition space into a grand three-dimensional tableau. In an equally invasive and inclusive drive her intervention shifts, colours, and undresses the institutional pillars and walls. A narrative audio guide by author Mary Rinebold Copeland forms a tangential story, emerging from her conversations with Grantina, and invites the viewer to weave the disparate visual and audible components into a montage-like, cinematographic experience.

Daiga Grantina (*1985 in Riga, Latvia; lives and works in Paris) is a graduate from the University of Fine Arts Hamburg. Her recent solo presentations span platforms including Kunsthaus Bregenz, kim? Contemporary Art Centre in Riga, Galerie Joseph Tang in Paris, Mathew Gallery in Berlin, and Hester Gallery in New York. Group exhibitions include Bergen Assembly in Norway and Campoli Presti in London. In 2013, Grantina was part of the international team of artists in research residency at Palais de Tokyo in Paris.

The exhibition is curated by Rhea Dall (lives and works in Oslo and Berlin), who is Director for UKS – Unge Kunstneres Samfund (Young Artists’ Society) in Oslo. In 2016 Dall was one of the artistic directors of the grand triennial for art and research in Bergen, Bergen Assembly which formed the second chapter of her previous project PRAXES Center for Contemporary Art, an institition which she founded in 2013 with Kristine Siegel in Berlin. Dall has recently contributed to journals such as Kunstkritik, Texte zur Kunst, Cura, Frieze, Spike Magazine, Bulletins of The Serving Library, and Mousse.

The show marks the start of the Kunstverein’s Best & Boldest series featuring a variety of young artists who work in all media and with different convictions, but have one thing in common: the multifaceted engagement with questions of our reality.

The exhibition is made possible by the kind support of the Culture Department of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg, the Hamburgische Kulturstiftung, and the Leinemann-Stiftung für Bildung und Kunst.

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Daiga Grantina, Pilars Sliding off Coat-ee, Kunstverein Hamburg, 2017

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Daiga Grantina, Pilars Sliding off Coat-ee, Kunstverein Hamburg, 2017

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Daiga Grantina, Pilars Sliding off Coat-ee, Kunstverein Hamburg, 2017

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Daiga Grantina, Pilars Sliding off Coat-ee, Kunstverein Hamburg, 2017

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Daiga Grantina, Pilars Sliding off Coat-ee, Kunstverein Hamburg, 2017

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Daiga Grantina, Pilars Sliding off Coat-ee, Kunstverein Hamburg, 2017

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Daiga Grantina, Pilars Sliding off Coat-ee, Kunstverein Hamburg, 2017

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Daiga Grantina, Pilars Sliding off Coat-ee, Kunstverein Hamburg, 2017

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Daiga Grantina, Pilars Sliding off Coat-ee, Kunstverein Hamburg, 2017

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Daiga Grantina, Pilars Sliding off Coat-ee, Kunstverein Hamburg, 2017

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Daiga Grantina, Pilars Sliding off Coat-ee, Kunstverein Hamburg, 2017

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Daiga Grantina, Pilars Sliding off Coat-ee, Kunstverein Hamburg, 2017

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Daiga Grantina, Pilars Sliding off Coat-ee, Kunstverein Hamburg, 2017

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Daiga Grantina, Pilars Sliding off Coat-ee, Kunstverein Hamburg, 2017

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Daiga Grantina, Pilars Sliding off Coat-ee, Kunstverein Hamburg, 2017

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