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mutopia 5

 

Claudia Chaseling

Spatial Painting

 

Curated by Rachel Rits-Volloch

Design by Emilio Rapanà

 

30 June – 30 October 2020

At the Australian Embassy Berlin

Wallstrasse 76-79

 

[Currently restricted public access due to COVID-19 regulations]

 


 
 
 

 

Splashes of bright colors in biomorphic forms. Shapes and hues redolent of crackling, explosive energy. Large format works overflowing the gallery walls. Visitors to an exhibition of Claudia Chaseling’s work are confronted with a psychotropic saturation of visual information interlaced with occasional text and the URLs of source materials for Chaseling’s research. For what seems initially to be pure abstraction, is in fact so much more. Chaseling began her “mutopia” series in 2011, honing her technique of Spatial Painting to focus on visualizing the nuclear chain that leads to radioactive contamination and its mutative effect on living things. Chaseling’s inquiry into the ways that abstract, non-representational painting can communicate narratives with a socio-political meaning – namely, the radioactive contamination of depleted uranium munitions – became the subject of her practice-based PhD, awarded by the Australian National University (ANU) in Canberra in 2019. Chaseling’s body of work, informed by her dissertation, is on show at the Australian Embassy in her own home city of Berlin – a tribute to her 21 years of living between Australia and Germany and the Embassy’s commitment to highlighting Australian-German artistic links, even in these precarious times.. This exhibition was realized during the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak and resulting lockdown, at a time when most other cultural institutions were canceling or postponing their programs. The new site-specific work made especially for this exhibition was able to be completed in time only because the artist obtained her materials the day before shops closed for the lockdown. And while the eyes and hearts of the world were focused on the viral threat and aftermath of COVID-19, Claudia Chaseling, working in her studio throughout the lockdown, was addressing another kind of insidious invisible killer: radiation and its repercussions.

“mutopia 5” is an exhibition of Spatial Painting featuring 15 works, ranging in media from painting to watercolor, sculpture, print, and video. Encompassing a decade of Claudia Chaseling’s artistic practice, this body of work takes us on a psychedelic journey through the nuclear chain leading to depleted uranium and its toxic aftermath. Chaseling’s preoccupation with the mutations caused by radiation poisoning is somehow rendered even more relevant now, in the time of COVID-19, when suddenly we are all learning so much more about the mutations of viral strains, about the mistakes made at a cellular level, the glitches in genetic code causing mutations. As the title of this exhibition suggests, this is the 5th iteration of the “mutopia” body of work. And true to its subject matter, with each iteration, the exhibition mutates into something new, adapting to the architecture of its space with the creation of new site-specific works. “Mutopia” – Claudia Chaseling’s verbal paradox, comingling the terms mutation and utopia – has been her core subject matter since 2011, with the creation of “Murphy the Mutant”, Chaseling’s graphic novel of watercolors animated on video. This narrative work effectively describes her fixation upon the enduring environmental devastation of nuclear waste and munitions, transposing into a paradoxically sweet atomic allegory, akin to a children’s book, the horrific aftermath of the way we wage war in the modern world.

Illustrating the trajectory of her practice over the past decade, this early work – and her only video to date – is shown in this exhibition alongside Chaseling’s newest 9-meter long site-specific Spatial Painting, “mutopia 5”, made fore the Australian Embassy Berlin,. The visual language Chaseling has created and the imagery in her work consists of distorted landscapes, poisoned places, mutated creatures and plants whose deformation is caused by radioactive contamination. Her images are not predictions of some post-apocalyptic future, but rather the result of her research into historic and ongoing ways in which we continue to poison our planet with the byproducts of wars and nuclear accidents. To ground the psychedelic fantasy of her imagery in the harsh realities of the nuclear chain her work exposes, Chaseling embeds within her paintings quotations and URLs referencing her source materials, mapping the places polluted by depleted uranium, an environmental contaminant that is a derivative waste product of nuclear power and nuclear weapons technology.

The tension in Claudia Chaseling’s practice of Spatial Painting lies precisely in the gap between its form and its content. Visually striking, beautifully colorful, the work is seductive, attracting the eye to its complexity of layers; in the artist’s own words “dissolving landscapes into compositions of toxic colour that comprise negative shapes and abstract forms”. Because the topics Chaseling addresses are ugly, she strives to keep her work from becoming too aesthetic, using negative space, leaving gaps within her imagery to leave room for interpretation. Just as her work can be read on the levels of both form and content, Chaseling builds a duality of perspective into the foundations of her practice. Striving for the moment “when a painting becomes an environment”, the artist “proposes a novel understanding of spatiality, one that reaches beyond formalism, reaching into today’s political landscape…to awaken our attention to environmental damages caused by man-made radioactive radiation, which is mutating nature”. Chaseling’s terminology “Spatial Painting” refers to this technique of producing sociopolitically inflected works which are at once 2 and 3-dimensional, created in such a way that when seen from a particular point of view, the works come to appear paradoxically flat. This is no easy feat in a practice where the works tend to morph into the architecture of their exhibition space, overflowing the bounds of their canvases, exploding onto the ceilings, melting onto the floors, oozing onto the walls to bend around corners. In the past, much of Chaseling’s expanded painting has been created within the exhibition space itself, and accordingly designed to be temporary, existing only for the duration of each show. However, taking a new direction in her practice, her most recent Spatial Painting “mutopia 5” was made during the 3 months of pandemic lockdown entirely in the artist’s studio, but with the site-specific point of perspective designed for the architecture of the exhibition space at the Australian Embassy.

It took a global pandemic to stop the world in its tracks under the threat of an invisible killer which pays no heed to national borders or political will. Yet Claudia Chaseling has been painting another such invisible killer for over a decade. Why is it that no amount of media coverage and political protest – no amount of outrage at dirty bombs and weapons testing – can stop the invisible killer of radiation poisoning our planet? Why could not the global tragedies of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Chernobyl or Fukushima also stop the world in its tracks? This exhibition is a warning, a wake-up-call exploding onto our retinas in poison pigments, and invading our consciousness with information we should find as terrifying as any pandemic. As the artist maintains, “mass destruction is enabled by mass distraction”. Using her visual language of Spatial Painting to both inform and protest about the fatal status quo of global energy and arms industries, Claudia Chaseling has for over a decade persevered in focusing our attention on the pernicious weapon of mass destruction which is depleted uranium. Yet in designating this body of work “mutopia”, she does so with hope for a better future. “Mutopia” – Claudia Chaseling’s verbal paradox, comingling the terms mutation and utopia, is perhaps not the oxymoron it first appears to be. Mutations in the DNA of living things caused by radioactive isotopes is the stuff of sci-fi horror. Yet, from the very beginning of life on this planet, genetic mutation has also been a survival mechanism. Without such mutations over the course of millennia, we would not exist. If we enable our planet to survive long enough, perhaps we too may change into something better.

MOMENTUM is proud to present Claudia Chaseling’s solo exhibition “mutopia 5”, as part of its 10th Anniversary Program, celebrating the foundation of MOMENTUM in Sydney, Australia in 2010. The exhibition was realized as part of the foyer exhibition program at the Australian Embassy Berlin, which hosts visual arts showcases by Australian artists and German artists connected with Australia.

[Rachel Rits-Volloch]

[All quotations are taken either from conversations with the artist, or from Claudia Chaseling’s PhD dissertation, “Spatial Painting And The Mutative Perspective: How Painting Can Breach Spatial Dimensions And Transfer Meaning Through Abstraction”, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia, 2019.]



 

mutopia 5 Exhibition Tour with Claudia Chaseling

 



 

ARTIST BIO:
 

Dr. Claudia Chaseling is an international artist, born in Munich and living and working in Berlin and Canberra, Australia. She received a Masters degree in Visual Art, from the University of the Arts in Berlin (UdK), and in 2019 Chaseling completed her studio-based PhD in visual arts, with a focus on spatial painting, at the Australian National University (ANU) in Canberra. Her work has been exhibited in over sixty solo and group exhibitions, notably in the United States, Australia and Europe. She has been featured in the X-Border Biennial, Finland; the Lueleå Biennial, Sweden; and the Lorne Biennial, Australia. Recent projects include solo exhibitions at Art Gallery Nadezda Petrovic, Cacak, Serbia; Wollongong Art Gallery, Australia; Staatliche Kunsthalle Baden-Baden, Germany; Krohne Art Collection, Eifel, Germany; Yuill Crowley Gallery, Sydney, Australia; Kunstverein Duisburg, Germany; Art-in-Buildings, New York City and Milwaukee, US; among others. Chaseling has taken part in international artist residency programs, including: Art Omi and the International Studio and Curatorial Program in New York, USA; Texas A&M University, USA; and the Australian National University, Canberra, Australia. The Verlag für zeitgenoessische Kunst und Theorie Berlin published her first extensive monograph in 2016.

 

The Making-Of mutopia 5:

70 Days in the Artist’s Studio

 

 
 

NOW (2020)

Claudia Chaseling in collaboration with Emilio Rapanà
digital print and 10 water colours on paper and canvas 190cm x 390cm

A new artwork made for mutopia 5, which we were required to remove from this exhibition due to it’s political content.

 

 
 

Publications by Claudia Chaseling

 




 



 

Source Material:

Selections from the Artist’s Research into Depleted Uranium

[Click on each title to follow the links.]

 

The film which launched the artist’s fixation on Depleted Uranium:
“Deadly Dust” Documentary, Frieder F. Wagner, Germany, 2006 > >

 



 

 
 
 

This exhibition was realised thanks to the generous support of:

 

 
 
 
And thanks to our Media Partners:


 
 

INSTALLATION PHOTOS
by Ruppert Bohle