When does “tasty” become “tasteless”? What is allowed and what is not? Where is the boundary between beauty and ugliness? These questions will be raised by the exhibition of sculptor Kęstutis Svirnelis, Boundaries and Margins, which will open on 3 March at 6 p.m. at the gallery Meno Niša. 

After studying sculpture at the Vilnius Academy of Arts, a renowned creator of kinetic objects Kęstutis Svirnelis received his master’s degree in Stuttgart, Germany, where he has been living for more than twenty years. The artist, who creates kinetic, moving interactive objects and installations, analyses the themes of capitalism, consumerism, liberalism, democracy, man and his role in the system.

The exhibition Boundaries and Margins is the fifteenth solo exhibition of K. Svirnelis. The artist has exhibited his work not only in Germany and Lithuania, but also in England, Austria, Turkey, South Korea, Poland, and the USA. The gallery Meno Niša has also successfully presented the works of K. Svirnelis at the art fairs ArtVilnius, Positions Berlin, and Vienna Contemporary. In 2018, K. Svirnelis was awarded as the Audience Select Artist at ArtVilnius.

“We have a long-standing friendship with K. Svirnelis. Symbolically, it was this artist’s exhibition Furs (Šerstis), created especially for the gallery space, that marked the 15th anniversary of Meno Niša. This year, we are celebrating the gallery’s 20th anniversary, which also includes an exhibition by K. Svirnelis,” said Diana Stomienė, the head of Meno Niša.

The materials used by K. Svirnelis (dollars, second-hand clothes, sewage pipes, rubber gloves, cellophane, wheelchairs, mannequins) are a political and at the same time very personal statement. Most of Svirnelis’ objects move, shake, expand, or even make sounds; these movements are very often unexpected for the viewer, they throw the viewer off-balance, make them laugh, and then wonder what they have seen.

The exhibition Boundaries and Margins is an attempt by K. Svirnelis to convey to the viewer the feeling of boundary margins in visual language – through his objects. What is that? The artist is interested in the concept of boundaries and their margins in the broad sense. In the works of the exhibition, he raises questions about what the boundary is in different dimensions, why it appears, shifts, or disappears, what processes affect it. We set boundaries everywhere, and boundaries have margins. When is it too much, when is it too little? Pushing the boundaries also pushes the margins.

“I make everything absolute, and yet, at the same time, I go into details – as an artist, I am allowed to compare anything to anything else. I see a microworld in a macroworld, which are basically the same. I can create a work that looks like an animal, or maybe a virus. Or maybe it looks like a cosmic explosion? A multi-layered associative expression, where you don’t know what it might be, I hope, leaves a mixed impression on the viewer as well,” – K. Svirnelis talks about the concept of the exhibition, adding that his objects try to express the question of boundaries and margins in such a way that one doesn’t know how to look at it, the works remain a mystery.

“I leave it to the viewer to decide. They will decide for themselves, according to their own being, according to their religion, education, experiences, etc. What is it and how should it be seen? The more associations, the greater the margin / the more thoughts, and the more information about who we are.” – said the artist.

K. Svirnelis’ exhibition Boundaries and Margins will be open at the gallery Meno Niša from 3 March to 1 April.

 


Kęstutis Svirnelis about the exhibition:

The exhibition Boundaries and Margins is an attempt to convey to the viewer the feeling of boundary margins in visual language – through its objects. What is that? 

I am interested in the concept of boundaries and their margins in the broad sense. What is a boundary in different dimensions, why does it appear, shift, or disappear, and what are the processes that affect it? When does “tasty” become “tasteless” and why? What is allowed and what is not? Where is the boundary between beauty and ugliness? Where does science begin and where does faith? What is permissible and what is not? We set boundaries everywhere, and boundaries have margins. When is it too much, when is it too little? Pushing the boundaries also pushes the margins.

The world is immersed in the accelerating introduction of new technologies. Who still has the time to look critically at the whole and the details, the interconnections, from a distance and not in a hurry? We are immersed in our daily routine. Can we slow down and reflect on who we are, who we want to be? For example, the moral technological questions of whether or not we can clone people, genetically modify them, who a human being is in the digital space.

I make everything absolute, and yet, at the same time, I go into details – as an artist, I am allowed to compare anything to anything else. I see a microworld in a macroworld, which are basically the same. I can create a work that looks like an animal, or maybe a virus. Or maybe it looks like a cosmic explosion? A multi-layered associative expression, where you don’t know what it might be, I hope, leaves a mixed impression on the viewer as well.

I am not trying to be didactic and claim through my work that something is one or the other. In my objects, there is an attempt to express the question of boundaries and margins in a way that one doesn’t know what to think of it, the work remains a mystery. I leave it to the viewer to decide. They will decide for themselves, according to their own being, according to their religion, education, experiences, etc. What is it and how should it be seen? The more associations, the greater the margin / the more thoughts, and the more information about who we are.

 

The gallery is sponsored by Vilnius City Municipality

Vilnius

 

Exhibition partner –  Ministerium für Wissenschaft, Forschung und Kunst Baden-Württemberg

 


In collaboration with ArtLand, we invite you to enjoy a 3D tour of the exhibition Boundaries and Margins: