Ondřej Vinš
Pedestrian Thing / Dedicated to the Eratosthenes of Cyrene
Ondřej Vinš’s work often reflects the time he spends in nature and
landscapes, and their variedness has become a source of inspiration
for the installation in the lower floor of the Fotograf Gallery. Vinš
has mapped the relief of the Central Bohemian Uplands using
a cartographic method. In certain moments, he blackened the tracing
paper attached to the map in places he could see. This material he later
used as a basic default element of the entire exhibition – an installation
consisting of two objects: the first one is an abstract landscape made
up of stacked and highlighted darkened areas, creating an illusion of
motion, like a filmstrip of a strange format.
The illusion is then made concrete by the second object when
black becomes white, and the projection of a 16mm film illuminates
parts of the blind landscape model. The landscape is doubled with
the help of a suspended mirror reflecting the model that loses its
spaciousness and returns back to its two-dimensional form. It becomes
a scheme of motion on a plane – a map that not only records the
topographical area, but also shows Ondřej Vinš’s journey when he
walked in the Central Bohemian Uplands, which is a principle we know
from mobile applications.
Thus, the exact scientific method and factual description miraculously
becomes a poetic record of travels, similar to landscape painting. And
both make sense.
#32 non-work
Archive
- #45 hypertension
- #44 empathy
- #43 collecting
- #42 food
- #41 postdigital photography
- #40 earthlings
- #39 delight, pain
- #38 death, when you think about it
- #37 uneven ground
- #36 new utopias
- #35 living with humans
- #34 archaeology of euphoria
- #33 investigation
- #32 Non-work
- #31 Body
- #30 Eye In The Sky
- #29 Contemplation
- #28 Cultura / Natura
- #27 Cars
- #26 Documentary Strategies
- #25 Popular Music
- #24 Seeing Is Believing
- #23 Artificial Worlds
- #22 Image and Text
- #21 On Photography
- #20 Public Art
- #19 Film
- #18 80'
- #17 Amateur Photography
- #16 Photography and Painting
- #15 Prague
- #14 Commerce
- #13 Family
- #12 Reconstruction
- #11 Performance
- #10 Eroticon
- #9 Architecture
- #8 Landscape
- #7 New Staged Photography
- #6 The Recycle Image
- #5 Borders Of Documentary
- #4 Intimacy
- #3 Transforming Of Symbol
- #2 Collective Authorship
- #1 Face