16 December 2014

2014 'The New New World' at 'Layers of Response' exhibition (collaboration with Tony Cran), NARS gallery, New York
















The art of divination, reading signs and symbols in the hope of catching a glimpse of what may come is the central concept embedded within this installation.
This project has been developed during Mariana & Tony's residency at NARS. New York was chosen for this project because it is in many ways the crowning jewel of Western Civilisation. Within it's facets can be seen reflections of our present and the distopian / utopian dichotomy which lies at the heart of creating possible futures for our civilisation.

A Moon lander module model is constructed of debris and cheap materials to simultaneously reflect the accomplishments and ideals of our society and the price paid for letting those ideals slip into aggressive and asymmetrical development. This model is symbolically a shelter, a monument to idealism and an attempted talisman to ignite reflection within the viewer. Within the lander itself, visible through a deep gash in its side, a projection screen is showing twin stories of divination -  a tarot reader doing a reading on the short term undercurrents of American political climate and an astrologer talking about the long term future of New York City itself.
(Artist Statement, Mariana Jandova + Tony Cran, 2014)

08 October 2014

2014 'The Voyage Home' at 'What Follows Came Before' exhibition, Seventh gallery, Melbourne (curated by Amelia Winata)












The Voyage Home is a reflection on a search for home, a search coloured by unique individual perceptions of those who embark on this journey. Two people undergo a process of translocation from one country to another together. Yet, without even realising it, they create their own narratives within the experiences they shared, each having a completely different perspective and understanding of what was going on at that time. 
It is a deeply personal search as well as physical relocation from one space to another. It is a search that is at once shared and solitary. 

Three videos are projected large onto the walls of the gallery. First reveals the artist's father sharing a story about his escape from communist Czechoslovakia to Australia, and his life and relationships throughout this process. The second shows his ex-wife sharing that same story told from her perspective. The final projection is a shifting image - Australian and Czech landscape, slowly merging into each other. In front of this projection stands a fragile ladder built of balsa wood, connecting the ceiling to the floor with highly reflective black perspex at each end of the ladder. A symbolic journey is evoked as viewer gazes into the dark perspex and sees the ladder continuing onwards and disappearing into black void, a journey that never ends, the climb for the ultimate happiness that cannot be found. 
(Artist Statement, Mariana Jandova, 2014)

30 March 2014

2013 'Revolution Over' Exhibition at Blindside, Melbourne











Reassessment of culture leads to the innovation of culture.
Revolution-over is a work consisting of three unique insights into the lives of the family affected at first by the second world war, then the communist regime and subsequent revolution in former Czechoslovakia. It is a story of a country going through a turbulent fall of dictatorships and of one family caught in the events that affected a whole nation.

The installation reveals a darkened room whose only sources of light are flickering projections on the wall. Close to the centre of the room stands a tower made of raw wood,  resembling watch towers found on the edge of czech woods where hunters wait for game through which 3 projections are streamed onto the walls. Three stories are told by grandmother, mother and daughter revealing the deep undercurrent of oppression which resulted in a unified national resistance and the elation that came after the symbolic uncovering of family histories, personal stories and experiences which had to remain hidden for so long. 

Although these stories are set against a chain of events that saw the end of the nazi occupation and the rise and fall of the communist regime, they are also uniquely personal – they are stories of three women, family members, living their lives as ordinary people albeit set in what to the western eye appears as extraordinary circumstances. This installation presents at once a comfortingly domestic scene and one filled with foreboding and dread. It is at once heart-warming and alarming. 
(excerpt from proposal, Mariana Jandova, 2013)



24 September 2013

2013 'The Messenger' Exhibition at C3 Gallery (Collaboration with Tony Cran), Melbourne








Space probe Voyager traverses the depths of space, a diminutive creation of human ingenuity and an overwhelming desire to reach out, to stretch oneself beyond the limits imposed by our beautiful living Earth. The departure of Voyager from its earthly home was but one of the signifiers of the rapidly changing society in the second half the 20th century. Just like Voyagers' message of peaceful exploration and communication with other life forms out there somewhere, the society witnessed an increasing occurrence of a new type of social movement – one advocating non-violence, respect for other cultures and beliefs, a direction toward a more humanistic way of life. The sincere idealism and beliefs in positive change have since been dulled but we as a society again and again witness echoes of this resurging need to reform – be it the recent Occupy protests or countless initiatives by various social/environmental change organisations.

The Messenger presents the Voyager probe as a hand made object, using found or discarded materials - a symbolic representation of societal hopes and the idealism that personifies the counter-culture movement, adorned with accumulated debris of the collective dreams for a better world. A silent audience watches the probe – 1960's counter culture revolutionaries. We sense the pertinent question arising in our mind – can we really succeed at making this form of resistance a way forward? Can we really change things for better, transform our society, or are we just travelling into empty space?
(excerpt from proposal, Mariana Jandova & Tony Cran, 2013)

23 September 2013

2012 'Fata Morgana' Exhibition at Seventh Gallery, Melbourne







A tall ornate black booth without any apparent entry points is positioned at the centre of the gallery space. Its dimensions vaguely resemble a photo booth or a church confessional. Upon closer examination, a small circular opening just below half way up its side is revealed, luring the viewer to kneel and take a peek at what's hidden inside.

Once the viewer succumbs to temptation and peeks into the darkness, the booth reveals a peculiar gold like shimmer flickering and glittering in the dark, which gradually becomes recognisable as sunlight emerging from behind leaves of a tree swaying in the wind, a tree that grows just outside the gallery. 

It is through the elaborate concealment which invites fantasies of secrets, treasures or even peep shows that the image of the sunlit tree is transformed into an object of reverence and desire. It becomes a poignant metaphor for any object of desire but remains ultimately inaccessible as a mere reflection of a reflection.
This installation offers an in-sight, not without a touch of humour, into the extraordinary within the mundane. It is a reflection on human curiosity and construction of value systems, the arch of desire and the notion of the unreachable 'treasures' standing on our doorsteps.
(excerpt from proposal, Mariana Jandova, 2012)

22 September 2013

2012 'In the Light of Days to Come' Exhibition at Kings ARI gallery, Melbourne






We find ourselves in a time of growing awareness about the world we inhibit. The journey we take from here will in many way decide what kind of future awaits us. Deep space has long held the human imagination captive but with the world in a global financial turmoil we have to ask ourselves is this the dawn or dusk of the space age? Was it worth the billions of dollars invested over the years? Money that perhaps could have been spent on feeding the hungry, or saving habitation here on Earth. We have eagerly ravaged this planet in the name of human progress, progress which is the very driving force of space exploration.

'In the Light of Days to Come' is an installation reflecting on the human drive to reach the stars, which sometimes comes at a high price. Its focal point is the image of the International Space Station that becomes a symbol of this drive as it hovers just beyond the edge of the great big life sustaining bubble that is our world. It is a representation of our thirst for knowledge but also the collaboration of humanity to achieve something greater than itself. It is a totem of the space age.
(excerpt from proposal, Mariana Jandova, 2012)

17 June 2013

2012 'Essential Fire' Group Exhibition at Incinerator Gallery, Melbourne









Essential Fire here represents the innate drive to create, to express self, and a reflection on what that means to us. For my contribution to the group show I have created an installation comprising of a home made telescope and an oil-on-canvas painting. 

The image of a burning monk is simultaneously awe inspiring and terrifying. I am at awe because to do such a thing as calmly and peacefully must require an incredible inner strength. I am at awe when I reflect on the human ability to sacrifice self for an ultimate higher cause. I am terrified of the human ability to sacrifice self for a higher cause, especially when one considers the events of the recent decades where we have seen this power be used to horrific ends. After all, what defines a higher cause is incredibly vulnerable to interpretation. 

The image of the burning monk represents a fascination with human mind and spirit to me, its complexities, its beauty and its pitfalls. It is my essential fire, what I burn for. Painting this image is an act of a desire to understand what it is we are made of, as is the act of constructing a scientific instrument which at once enables the viewer to observe the image and hinders it by not allowing a full scale view. And so it is,  that even as we seek to understand things we become increasingly aware of all that is yet obscured. 
(Artist Statement, Mariana Jandova, 2012)

15 June 2013

2011 'Final Frontier' exhibition at Trocadero gallery, Melbourne












The infinite blackness of space embodies a deeply ingrained fascination for us. For millennia we have gazed at the night sky and pondered the existence of things much larger than ourselves. So what is it about us that causes such malady? Why do we dream of space travel?

We pay witness to a time where the initial excitement about the future of space travel has turned into a more sobering reality of funding issues, extreme technical challenges and the promise of lives yet to be lost to accident or sacrificed to the sheer time requirements involved in traversing this void to even our nearest neighbouring planets let alone to a possible life sustaining 'other' Earth light years away. As we are steadily running out of resources we are starting to question the need to invest vast amounts of energy into these programs. Can we really afford to keep this pace? At what cost? Can we afford not to? If we take into account the recent announcements by the scientific community that if we continue growing at the rate we currently are, as soon as 2030 Humanity will require 2 planets to support itself.


A tall unfinished copy of ARES 1 rocket launcher commissioned by NASA that would have seen the return of lunar exploration had it not been subsequently abandoned due to lack of funds stands alone in a darkened space. An abstracted play of light sourced from close-up shots of fireworks reminiscent of supernova cataclysms and birthing of stars creates the lighting for the launch tower in totality.
The fragile incomplete tower, placed on a black perspex reflecting its image like a dark mirror, is constructed out of thin sheets of soft balsa wood giving the appearance of balancing on the edge of collapse.
(excerpt from proposal, Mariana Jandova, 2011)