id | name | copyright | license |
---|---|---|---|
292314 | RUUKKU 21.8.2016 | Denise Ziegler | All rights reserved |
292307 | RUUKKU 21.8.2016 | Denise Ziegler | All rights reserved |
292050 | Image 1 rajattu | Denise Ziegler | All rights reserved |
292040 | Sain viirin 2015 mp4 - copy | Denise Ziegler | All rights reserved |
292038 | RUUKKU 21.3.2016 - copy | Denise Zigler | All rights reserved |
292036 | image 3 ziegler - copy | Denise Ziegler | All rights reserved |
292034 | city whisperer - copy | Denise Ziegler | All rights reserved |
292032 | Image 1 Ziegler - copy | Denise Ziegler | All rights reserved |
291490 | Sain viirin 2015 mp4 | Denise Ziegler | All rights reserved |
291488 | RUUKKU 21.3.2016 | Denise Zigler | All rights reserved |
290546 | image 2 ziegler | Denise Ziegler | All rights reserved |
290544 | image 3 ziegler | Denise Ziegler | All rights reserved |
289847 | city whisperer | Denise Ziegler | All rights reserved |
289845 | Image text 1 | Denise Ziegler | All rights reserved |
289843 | Image 1 Ziegler | Denise Ziegler | All rights reserved |
276225 | city whisperer | Denise Ziegler | All rights reserved |
With ironic eyes
Denise Ziegler is a visual artist, researcher and person walking through the city. She proposes a way to see a familiar environment with ironic eyes. Through this kind of observation, ingredients of new kind may arise, behind the views considered self-evidence. Ziegler directs her critical gaze to everyday situations and tries to deconstruct the ways we usually react them – even to reveal political statements behind them. Irony as a manifestation does not contain a hazy critique but offers a gentle, indirect and hidden message.
In this exposition, Ziegler moves from the artwork as an end product to experimental and participatory research cases, using interventions as means. She visits and revisits public urban spaces and realises similarities but also conflicts between the visual elements. She also settles her own video in the middle of noisy and colourful shopping paradise.
Intervention as a way to interfere and stick to something is a research operation that raises questions. It could also be a mean to participate in processes when complex environments are built, achieve change and break hierarchic manners of an approach.
Ziegler positions herself thoroughly. As doing practice-based research, she takes part in many discussions, but at the same time struggles rid of the specific definitions of doing research: Her research is artistic, because she is not following a path defined beforehand – still this research is more clearly structured in comparison with usual artistic research cases, in which there is ”a laboratory without any protocol”. When the writer describes her role, she meanwhile takes part in defining the concept of artistic research and showing the diversity of this working field.
Ironic situations are not intentionally constructed as ironic, but waiting to be found. In the first example, Ziegler saw similarity in a cosmetic shop between colourful logos and the coats of the arms on the wall. At the same time, she noticed their contradiction. Irony does not normally become revealed if one does not know the context, and in this case Ziegler was aware of the cultural history of the town. Her aim was to approach objects open-minded, but there arises a suspicion if the observer might have been a prison of her own expectations. Why could commercial and non-commercial representation be involved, as they both belong to the multilayered and hybrid urban place?
In my comment, I have paid attention to that seeing situations with ironic eyes is subjective and precisely the researcher´s own insight – by all means a good starting point to settle questions forward. The most interesting in this exposition is the new kind of way to see and it leading to further speculation about how this experimental method could be more generally adapted.
The images are essential in elucidating the interventions. Often, the first picture has a key role in leading the readers to understand the context of the article. The largest or the otherwise dominant one rises interest and tempts them to get acquainted with the article. Here the layout is clear, still without contrast. The video ”I got a pennant” works more powerful in the shopping mall when framed tightly on the vertical screen. The fourth image appears as a nice SURPRISE, and works as a metaphor of the ironic gaze.