Tanatiriub

  • "Tanatiriub" is about imagination, wondering, getting lost, dreaming and just being one among many others. It presents a model for surviving modern society, in which everyone of us feels, for different reasons, desperate due to the effects of global Corona Epidemia. We want to break out, become again what we deserve to be, and be free again. Hybrids and Chimären can help us to do so. They belong to another world, and are parts of our imagination.

    Different artist from different continents developped over the last millenia appropriate mostly mythical figures. Each Culture creates their own Hybrids and Chimära. Nowedays we talk about Hybrid Cars, or about plants who became through gen-manipalation Chimär Vegatation. As for us humans we are only a few steps away from Robotor with a high level of artificial intelligence becoming so called „ I Humans„ Mankind is such a curious species that it will be difficult for them to stop inventing. Creating art belongs to this human need, to go always one step further. By maximalising the synaptical function of our brain, visual art helps us to create necessary space for the yet unknown. Art gives us a feeling of neural satisfaction, which is comparable with the different flavors of Ice cream, discovered step by step by not only children but also adults.

    The different spaces of „Krinzinger Projekte“ are used differently. Hybrids and Chimäre are shown in various ways, seen by artists from different countries and different points of view. One space invites the visitor to a more intimate way of looking, presenting curious-objects and futuristic creatures, „ 21 century Fabel Figurs“ so to say. The other space deals with the more intellectual way of discovering and presents a panopticum of possible „ hybrid„ manifestations. This presentation is more intellectual and less „emotional“.

  • Nick Ervinck

    Designed by Nick Ervinck in collaboration with STRATASYS

    Designer Page

  • Printer: J850™

    Materials: VeroMultiMaterial

    Size: 350 x 150 x 186 mm

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Ming Vases by the Smithsonian

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Tanatilsur