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SPARK ART FAIR 2024 – Marko Marković

expanded

Iron Waterfall

Sculpture / Installation
iron, over 1000 iron leaves, consists of 3 curtain layers
B X L: 258 x 40 cm, H: 300 – 500 cm
edition: 2+AP

location: X6

photo: Kunsthaus Graz, M. Lackner / Pablo Chiereghin
production: Sammlung Friedrichshof Stadtraum

Marko Marković presents an impressive installation/sculpture titled “Iron Waterfall” (2022) in the EXPANDED section of the SPARK. This installation consists of thousands of iron tears interconnected to form a curtain that hangs freely in the space. The appearance is reminiscent of a waterfall, with the iron tears  resembling both a hard protective layer and potential sources of injury. The sculpture invites the spectators to performatively walk under the tears of the Iron Waterfall and pass to the other side.

 

 

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The shapes of the tears remind of swastikas, thus symbolizing not only the ambivalent nature of the Iron Curtain but also the power structures and identity conflicts that Marković confronts in his artworks. The artist also refers to the association with the meanders of ancient Greece, symbolizing the roots of Western Eurocentrism clinging to each other.  The symbolism of the Iron Curtain, especially in the context of the Cold War, is reflected upon. This curtain was not only a physical barrier but also a symbol of the division of Europe and the world between the two superpowers, the USA and the USSR, which remain till today.

Yugoslavia played a particular role in the Non-Aligned Movement during the Cold War, as it distanced itself from the Eastern Bloc and took an independent stance after the rupture between Tito and Stalin in 1948. Born in the Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia (1983) Markovic talks about the position of in-between and transition times of collective memory in the war and post-war period of 90es.

In the context of the Capitalocene today, Iron Waterfall is an imaginative vision toward future societies built upon new perspectives of utopian constructs. Monumental sculpture heavy and light at the same time levitates in the air defining its gravity. By being simultaneously visible and invisible it evokes ambivalent sensations questioning the power of perception and the thoughts of division and authority.

Iron Waterfall
Iron Waterfall
Iron Waterfall
Iron Waterfall
Iron Waterfall
Iron Waterfall

Marko Marković

Marko Marković graduated in Painting at the Academy of Fine Arts in Split and the pedagogical section of the University of Zadar. He also holds a master’s degree in Art & Science from the University of Applied Arts Vienna, returning later to work in the same department as the Programme Coordinator for the European Capital of Culture Rijeka 2020. He has been a guest lecturer at the UDK Berlin, at the IZK/Institute for Contemporary Art Graz, the Academy of Arts Zagreb and at the University of Applied Arts Vienna, as well as an independent curator in cooperation with MMSU – Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art Rijeka and mumok – Museum of Modern Art Foundation Ludwig Vienna. In 2022, Marko Marković presented his performance Southeast sadness in Central Europe at the Prague Biennale.

As an independent curator and artistic producer, Marko Marković focuses on cultural exchange with educational platforms

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Exhibition Views

Kurt Prinz

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