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Jonathan Penca: field plots

For the first time, the animated film "field plots" (2023) by artist Jonathan Penca will be shown in the media room of Museum Brandhorst. Between science fiction and a Gothic horror story, it casts a utopian perspective on the archaic technology of gardening in the endless (outer) space of the digital surface.
"field plots" engages with the themes and works in the exhibition “Future Bodies from a Recent Past—Sculpture, Technology, and the Body since the 1950s,” which can be seen until January 15, 2023.

January 10 – 15, 2023

Media room, lower level of Museum Brandhorst

Jonathan Penca: field plots

The artistic practice of Jonathan Penca (*1988, lives and works in Munich) combines performance, sound, costume design, sculpture, and painting, and blurs the boundaries between performing and visual arts. In drawings, collages and video works, as well as expansive sculptural installations and performative stage productions, he addresses central contemporary questions surrounding queer identity, science fiction, the natural sciences, and pop culture.

 

In his newly produced video work “field plots” (2023), Jonathan Penca thwarts the classical notion of animated film with experiments at the transition between the digital and analog space. In a backdrop-like set, computer-generated beings coexist with hybrid forms of nuns’ robes, tools and architectures made of papier-mâché and digitized through 3-D scans.

 

By playing with proportions, the confusion of the interior and exterior of spatial structures, and the possibilities of digitally translating sculptural or material qualities, a narrative structure appears. “field plots” is inspired by a minor character in Rumer Godden’s novel “Black Narcissus” (1939) and the film of the same name (1947), which revolve around a secluded nunnery. In the alienation of place, Sister Philippa plants a wide variety of flowers instead of the planned vegetables. Of interest to Penca is not only the question of vocation and power relations in places of (collaborative) work.

 

Starting from a utopian ideal of the monastery garden, “field plots” is primarily devoted to archaic agrarian technology and the constantly developing technological extension or substitutability of the human body in agriculture and horticulture. Situated somewhere between science fiction and a Gothic horror story, the animated film carries the vital necessity of food cultivation to absurdity with the unquestioning repetition of the act of gardening: sequences of actions of hoeing, sowing and harvesting are performed again and again using different tools, even if they no longer bear fruit in the endless (outer) space of the digital surface.

 

 

Directed by Jonathan Penca

Animation and programming: Jakob Penca

Sound: Jakob & Jonathan Penca

Artist Talk on January 15

Together with co-curator Franziska Linhardt, the artist will speak about questions surrounding artistic tools and reference material, body boundaries and extensions, and unproductive gardening.

Learn more