Claudia Rogge | individualism, reproducibility and mass

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

In the contemporary art scene, German artist Claudia Rogge is an exceptional person. She continually photographs crowds of practically identical people , all dressed in the same way and holding the same pose to create a unique mass identity. Arranged either in repetition, tessellation or in choreographed groups, her figures represent the unique little tiles that form an intricate mosaic. Man himself turns into a pattern, into an ornament. At the same time there is the question of whether the conceptual classification is justified. Are they really patterns or ornaments? Might they not simply be masses or forms? It seems, however, that we can cope best with the conceptual term of pattern.

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Although Claudia Rogge shows us patterns, her works no longer shows an indistinct and homogeneous element but one made up of minuscule differences that need to be sought out carefully in each single photograph. The disposition of the persons depicted reminds spectators of their own movements and postures, which are no mere coincidences but basic dimensions of the sense of social direction. Postures and emotions correspond with each other. Analysing the body language is helpful for a better understanding of other people. Claudio Rogge  plays with perception, which she carries on. She shows her wish to bring things closer together in terms of space and time. “If you pause motionless”, says photographer Robert Doisneau, “people will look at you.”

This is one of the elements which makes Claudia Rogge´s pictures so attractive. A motionlessness that repeats itself and thus appears to be movement within stillness.They can be approached in the same way one would approach a still life. With Vermeer, says philosopher Paul Virilio, the living world corresponds with a still life. With Claudia Rogge it seems the same yet with a slight difference: she has raised the living world of mere illusion to the status of an art icon. Our age, in which the mass media are left to themselves, has accomplished the step from the necessary to the superfluous. Claudia Rogge turns our gaze back to the aesthetic glossy print with its mass of people returning to us the individual within us.

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge 

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

Warmenhoven & Venderbos | designer fashion blog | Claudia Rogge

 

Photos by Claudia Rogge | Claudia Rogge website | Sources: Marianne Hoffmann

Christopher Baker: Hello World!

Warmenhoven & Venderbos blog: Christopher Baker: Hello World.

Warmenhoven & Venderbos blog: Christopher Baker: Hello World.

Hello World! or: How I Learned to Stop Listening and Love the Noise is an immersive, large-scale audio visual installation comprised of thousands of unique video diaries gathered from the Internet. The project is a meditation on the contemporary plight of democratic, participative media and the fundamental human desire to be heard.

Christopher Baker engages with his work often the rich collection of social, technological and ideological networks present in the urban landscape. Read also more about him and his creations in an earlier article posted on the Warmenhoven & Venderbos blog here.

On one hand, new media technologies like YouTube have enabled new speakers at an alarming rate. On the other hand, no new technologies have emerged that allow us to listen to all of these new public speakers. Each video consists of a single lone individual speaking candidly to a (potentially massive) imagined audience from a private space such as a bedroom, kitchen, or dorm room. The multi-channel sound composition glides between individuals and the group, allowing viewers to listen in on unique speakers or become immersed in the cacophony. Viewers are encouraged to dwell in the space.

Warmenhoven & Venderbos blog: Christopher Baker: Hello World.

Warmenhoven & Venderbos blog: Christopher Baker: Hello World.

Warmenhoven & Venderbos blog: Christopher Baker: Hello World.

Recently the Hello World audio visual installation was also used as backdrop for an interesting special on Swiss Television (Schweizer Fernsehen) called:  special Kulturplatz Extra report. This TV special focused on the theme: “Living with the computer: blessing or curse?” The reports range from the hippie roots of personal computing in silicon valley, to robot therapy for the elderly. 

Warmenhoven & Venderbos blog: Christopher Baker: Hello World.

 

Photos,video and source: Christopher Baker | Vimeo | Kulturplatz Extra

Christopher Baker : Art, society and its technologies

Christopher Baker was first trained as a scientist and moved to the creation of art later on. His work engages the rich collection of social, technological and ideological networks present in the urban landscape.He creates artifacts and situations that reveal and generate relationships within and between these networks. He explores the ways we imagine and represent ourselves before audiences and the ways we navigate and abide in public space.

One of his latest works is an installation in which he covers the online social networking sites. he uses the messages posted on for example micro blogs like Twitter and Facebook in this installation. These social websites are monitored and the thousands of messages which are posted every second on them are printed by twenty micro printers on virtual endless streams of paper.
The installation represents not only the fast  flow of fleeing thoughts which are posted by people from all over the world on these social networks  but it also points to the fact that these thoughts are accumulated, digitally stored and indexed by various systems and companies from all over the world.

Photos and video by Christopher Baker | Vimeo