Born in 1951 in Vienna, Rudolf Polanszky grew up in the 1960s, a decade that saw many artists bringing chance—the renunciation of egocentric control—into their compositional process. Polanszky experimented similarly. He attached paint-soaked sponges to his body and then slept on paper, the resulting image an expression of his body’s unconscious movement. He attached a giant spring to his posterior and bounced around the room in a seated position, bringing a paintbrush haphazardly to paper on the wall. His strategy was conceptual and performative at once. In the 1990s, using salvaged industrial materials—silver foil, aluminum, silicone, glass—Polanszky began to make mixed-media assemblages on canvas, which he called “reconstructions.” In this exhibition, copper foil has been used in the reconstructions, which are nothing less than ethereal planes of celestial delicacy. The show’s title, “Apeiron,” refers to an unbounded force born from nothingness and seeking balance. —L.J.
The Arts Intel Report
A Cultural Compass
For the World Traveler
For the World Traveler
A Cultural Compass
For the World Traveler
Rudolf Polanszky: Apeiron
When
Dec 10, 2021 – Jan 22, 2022
Where
Etc
Rudolf Polanszky, “Reconstructions / Choros / Ecliptics,” 2020 © Rudolf Polanszky. Photo: Jorit Aust, Courtesy Gagosian.
Nearby
1
Art
Lisson Gallery