Currently indexing
Tomorow01
Collection:UAL Art Collection
Date: 2018
Artist: Marton Nemes (Hungarian)
Dimensions:
30 x 20cm
Medium: Acrylic, Perspex and foil on mirror paper
Object number: UAC 938
See Also
DescriptionMarton Nemes studied MA Fine Art at Chelsea College of Arts. He says:
'After spending one year in London, I realised that my work is about techno. In a wider context the atmosphere and the aspiration I would like to capture is very similar to the phenomenon and experience of rave culture. I would like to create a disintegration and rearrangement of the pictorial state to bring the upheaval of some kind of newness.
I am involving techno music, DJ lights, police vinyl foils, metal, chain and mirrored Perspex to deepen the perception of a 2 dimensional painting. I am expanding and bending the surfaces, and with using sounds and lights I try to refer to the escapist counter cultural aspect of rave, and create some kind of multisensory experience. For this I look to the exhibition space to a party place and create a temporary autonomous zone like atmosphere in the gallery show.
My work can be the manifest of escapism, depicting a constant tension, effort, desire to the impossible break out from the frame. Never ending need of seeking pleasure and freedom that we try to reach every day.'
'After spending one year in London, I realised that my work is about techno. In a wider context the atmosphere and the aspiration I would like to capture is very similar to the phenomenon and experience of rave culture. I would like to create a disintegration and rearrangement of the pictorial state to bring the upheaval of some kind of newness.
I am involving techno music, DJ lights, police vinyl foils, metal, chain and mirrored Perspex to deepen the perception of a 2 dimensional painting. I am expanding and bending the surfaces, and with using sounds and lights I try to refer to the escapist counter cultural aspect of rave, and create some kind of multisensory experience. For this I look to the exhibition space to a party place and create a temporary autonomous zone like atmosphere in the gallery show.
My work can be the manifest of escapism, depicting a constant tension, effort, desire to the impossible break out from the frame. Never ending need of seeking pleasure and freedom that we try to reach every day.'