Services Editorial Design
Client ERES-Stiftung
Year 2023
Team Matthias Friederich, Julian von Klier, Luis Schneider
Cosmic potatoes and mysterious melons, attractive apparatuses and sensual spheres. The new exhibition at the ERES Foundation reaches for the stars and rotates with contemporary art positions, historical images and documents around a fixed point: the astronomer and mathematician Johannes Kepler (1571-1630).
“It’s a World Machine” is an artistic homage to the great Renaissance scholar that penetrates the vastness of the cosmos and gives the individual positions space to interpret scientific findings with imagination and innovation.
Thus Attila Csörgő’s installation can be read as a reinterpretation of Kepler’s groundbreaking, albeit speculative “World Machine” (1596), a construction that attempts to explain the number and size of the planets known at his time and their orbital properties around the sun on the basis of the five Platonic solids. Sigmar Polke provides a humorous commentary on the “machina mundi”. Are his “apparatus” or that of Wendelin Pressl possibly subject to Kepler’s new cosmology? The latter assumes a divine construction plan based on mathematical laws and that the universe is a machine comparable to a clockwork and thus calculable. While Alicja Kwade’s contribution recalls Kepler as the “surveyor of the heavens”, whose calculations of the orbit of Mars revealed that it is not circular but elliptical, Olafur Eliasson’s elegant space studies are interwoven with the “magnetic force” that, according to Kepler, keeps the planets on their orbits around the sun. Bertrand Lamarche’s sculpture, on the other hand, emphasises the fascinating inscrutability of space and draws the viewer into an almost magical pull.
Throughout his life, Johannes Kepler tried to unlock the secrets of the cosmos. His research revolutionised astronomy and paved the way for the modern natural sciences. His writings such as Mysterium Cosmographicum – World Secret (1596), Astronomia Nova – New Astronomy (1609) or Harmonices Mundi – World Harmonics (1619) are among the most important scientific publications ever – with findings such as Kepler’s three laws, from which not least space travel still benefits today.
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