• Julia Znoj
  • installation view

    aquadrome bubblepad, 2021, installation view, Unanimous Consent, Örlikon, Zurich


    installation view

    aquadrome bubblepad, 2021, installation view, Unanimous Consent, Örlikon, Zurich


    installation view

    aquadrome bubblepad, 2021, installation view, Unanimous Consent, Örlikon, Zurich


    pool case

    Pool Case, 2021, chicken wire, foam, paper mache, thermoplastics, paint, 23 x 94 x 142 cm


    compass polly

    Compass Polly, 2021, pu foam, paper mache, paint, acrylic glass, 33 x 62 x 78 cm


    may came

    May Came, Rooted, Bye May, 2020, plastic, acrylic paint, foam, rubber bands, 32 x 32 x 102 cm


    shape shifter

    PERIODIC SHAPE SHIFTER IN THE TIDE TIME OF HIGH CRIME, 2020, pu foam, plaster, plastic, leaves, ca. 33 x 107 x 70 cm (variable)


    installation view

    aquadrome bubblepad, 2021, installation view, Unanimous Consent, Örlikon, Zurich


    shadow polly

    Shadow Polly, 2021, pu foam, paper mache, 48 x 67 x 42 cm


    dry run

    Dry Run, 2021, (feat. Synchronschwimmerin Joelle Peschl), HD video projection, 3‘03“ (loop)
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    installation viw

    aquadrome bubblepad, 2021, installation view, Unanimous Consent, Örlikon, Zurich


    her coiling eyes

    Her Coiling Eyes, 2021, galvanized steel, 128 x 50 x 11 cm


    installation view

    aquadrome bubblepad, 2021, installation view, Unanimous Consent, Örlikon, Zurich


    installation view

    space for you‘ll figure it out (bubblepad), 2021, thermoplastics, acrylic paint, 70 x 100 x 10 cm


    gum

    gum (bubblepad), 2021, thermoplastics, acrylic paint, 31 x 33 x 6 cm


    !?

    !? (bubblepad),2021, thermoplastics, acrylic paint, 46 x 43 x 6 cm


    dropshield

    Dropshield (bubblepad), 2021, thermoplastics, acrylic paint, 60 x 40 x 8 cm


    sm

    SM (bubblepad), 2021 thermoplastics, acrylic paint, 20 x 23 x 7 cm


    abstract position

    reaching into your brain (abstract position), 2021, sugar, metal, food coloring, 1x 35 x 35 cm


    Anecdote

    Seeing a viscous inside of a shell as a child left me adjectiveless. Its lack of form made it seem as if it was staring back at me, like a mind black hole. Little did I know that another mind black hole will await me between my legs, only a few years later. A body part so abstract, that I still don’t know how it looks.

    The small doll

    Polly Pocket is the good citizen, much like her pristine doll colleagues. But she is small! Tiny! Her height is that of a thumbnail, a nostril, an ear can be her balcony, and she lives in a shell-like kit, which can be closed and carried away in a pocket. Polly’s extremities are too tiny to be movable, so in her pastel plastic landscape she is uncannily useless and visual. She usually has one to three indentations in which she could be planted to stand still. Once there, she would become an immobile image and her thoughts would be the game.
    Her shell was modelled on a makeup kit, which habitually included a mirror. But in lieu of a mirror, she reflects her interior back to the player. A miniature world overtakes the player’s face, like a macropara- site. The player’s otherwise ambiguous eyes become Polly’s poker face of photogenic girlhood. Through extreme cuteness, she morphs the player into a vampire, without a reflection.

    Inside – definition

    Thoughts – anxieties – tectonic movements – unthoughts – emotions lacking vocabularies – a colony of butterflies in the belly and the language they speak that we don’t understand. In the interior gravity, a rule that is always in place, is no longer paramount. Insides resemble liquid mercury, like when you break an analogue thermometer and its contents both leak and fall out, because they’re simultaneously liquid and hard, and you’re scared you’ll get poisoned. We seek definitions, but our insides are in flux and defini- tions belong to the outside.

    Outside, exterior, skin, tree bark, simulacra, surface, shield – definition

    Outsides are imperfect forms. They are our bodies, our vehicles to take us places, to meet other bodies, and, if we behave well, dip our fingertips into their insides. Some shells look like a clay blob covered in cake sprinkles, dipped in lava and left to be covered by moss, slowly, over millennia. References, things! Who cares! Forms are in fact porous, if a wave comes over them, they might very well dissolve. Outsides pretend to carry us, to present us, to unify us, to distinguish us among each other. They pretend to be a dam to the inside, but they’re not that good at what they do, and we anyway want things to overflow and to blind us to the point of borderlessness.

    aquadrome bubblepad

    In aquadrome bubblepad Julia Znoj shows two central groups of works – shells, usually closed, and, else- where, objects that might resemble insides of shells. aquadrome bubblepad is water‘s fluidity and thick- ness, which renders the border of one to many vagues (vague means wave in French), because the water envelopes its objects, makes folds and moves them in unison.

    Text: Julija Zaharijević