Housing Anxiety 8
Housing Anxiety 8

Irina Lotarevich

Housing Anxiety 8, 202391 x 38 x 7cmSign in to view price
Details
MaterialGallery
aluminium, stainless steel, locks and keysSophie Tappeiner
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.

This contemporary artwork features a grid-like arrangement of circular shapes against a stark white background. The circles are arranged in a uniform pattern, with each circle containing a smaller circular element at its center. The overall composition has a minimalist and regimented aesthetic, emphasizing the repetition of geometric forms. The artist's choice of a monochromatic color scheme and the use of clean, precise lines suggests an interest in exploring the interplay of light, shape, and visual perception. The disciplined, systematic approach to the artwork's construction likely reflects the artist's intention to challenge traditional notions of art and encourage the viewer to contemplate the inherent beauty in simplicity and order. ...

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Housing Anxiety 8
Artist
Irina Lotarevich
B.1991, Russian

Irina Lotarevich investigates the intersection of personal experience with broader social systems. She works with materials such as wood, metal, and cast elements, combining high-grade and devalued materials while employing precise fabrication methods to construct spatial narratives. Her minimal yet intricate forms reference architecture, bureaucracy, labor, language, and aspects of the human body, reflecting on the production and circulation conditions of the materials themselves. Her practice often integrates language and textual elements, weaving writing into sculptural compositions. By arranging industrial materials like aluminum and door locks into modular or grid-like structures, she evokes domestic and architectural forms while exploring the tensions and barriers inherent in social systems. Functional objects are transformed into symbols, representing limitations, access, and control within contemporary environments. Through this approach, Lotarevich engages with themes of restriction, personal agency, and societal structure. Her works encourage viewers to reflect on the invisible frameworks shaping everyday life, creating a dialogue between the material, the body, and the socio-political context in which they exist. ...

Irina Lotarevich: Artworks
Housing Anxiety 8
Sophie Tappeiner
Gallery
Sophie Tappeiner
Vienna