sabato 16 agosto 2014

DARIO ROBLETO: THE BOUNDARY OF LIFE IS QUIETLY CROSSED - MENIL COLLECTION, HOUSTON




DARIO ROBLETO
THE BOUNDARY OF LIFE IS QUIETLY CROSSED
Menil Collection
1515 Sul Ross - Houston
16/8/2014 - 4/1/2015

Artist Dario Robleto (b. 1972) has long explored emotional themes of the human condition, including love, loss, and grief. His sculptural work, which is labor-intensive and many times involves the transformation of materials, distills these complex and universal states into meditations on fragility and change. This site-specific project at the Menil will revolve around his most recent area of inquiry: the largely unexplored history of the human heartbeat. The installation and series of public talks, will link together the earliest historical attempts to record and visualize the human pulse and heartbeat, the female brain wave and heartbeat recordings onboard a NASA probe at the edge of the Solar System, and recent developments in artificial heart research that suggest a “beatless” heart may hold the answers for this life-saving technology to progress.
Robleto’s research has gradually expanded to examine those in unique positions who monitor contemporary forms of loss that raise analogous issues; for example, scientists monitoring the demise of glaciers, longevity researchers studying the oldest people on the planet, and audio historians on a quest to find the oldest sound recordings ever made. For the artist, these areas of study and the connections between them provide a framework to examine our larger understanding of existence, and of the positions held by certain individuals in our contemporary moment that stand at new thresholds of life and death. Unique to our time as the moon landing and artificial heart were to earlier generations, new discoveries in these fields of inquiry pose ideological obstacles as well as moral and theoretical challenges to our understanding of what it means to be human.

Dario Robleto: The Boundary of Life is Quietly Crossed has been commissioned and developed through a joint research residency with the Menil Collection and the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Center for the Arts, University of Houston. As the culmination of the artist’s research, the project will be realized at the Menil as a sculptural assemblage including rare historical recordings, and objects made by the artist. It will be contemplated by a series of public programs conceived of by the artist that will bring Houston’s greatest scientific resources, the medical community, and NASA together with the art world. In so doing, Robleto poses the idea that perhaps it is only through a conversation between art and science that certain questions can be asked. Perhaps the more poetic vocabulary offered by an artist is better suited to helping us grapple with the ramifications of the shifting boundaries of life.