christoph tannert - ulrich polster, recent works (2012) /text
ulrich polster / recent works (2012) /by christoph tannert
Ulrich Polster is not an artist whose works aim to please. His video projections
would hardly pass as decorative tapestries of sound, but demand rather to be
penetrated by the viewer, which may well add up to a laborious work process.
As is true of his latest pieces, two of which he will be showing at the gallery:
the 3-channel video projection “Shaoxing Lu”, and the 1-channel video projection
“Auslöschung” [= Extinction].
And what scenes: typically mysterious, darkly glowing, full of drama, seemingly
so full of life. And yet these are but dances pointing to the mortality of our
being.
It is difficult to grasp Polster’s works as a whole. The viewer has to immerse
him- or herself in order to recognise the specific quality of the elements. Only
once the viewer has allowed himself to be swept away by the swirling vortices of
sound and vision, has swum the whole, as it were, does he arrive at clarity.
Which is why Ulrich Polster conceives of his works as multi-media experiences in
sound, vision and space. His approach is painterly, while his ears listen in on
the delirium of his own thoughts and fantasies.
Polster’s works are aglow with an earthy expressiveness and Wagnerian opulence.
He unfurls a sweeping, incredibly intense tapestry of images, structures and
sounds. Narrative or melodic arcs are scarcely to be found, his concern is more
with conglomerates of imagery, sound montages and poignant spaces for the
imagination. The sounds accompany the play of images, drive it on, dramatise the
visuals. The unexpected intervenes at every turn, allowing him to lay waste to
the conventions. Slowness is the all-connecting element, each piece a long
enduring track which, in its dissonance and metric extravagance, recalls the
spirit of the band Godspeed You! Black Emperor and the waspishness of Austrian
writer Thomas Bernhard.
“Shaoxing Lu” develops into a psychedelically veiled moment on the cusp of day and night. Using ritualised sequences, Polster has teased out an interval of calm amid the twilight.
“Auslöschung” sparks off a tide of images in the viewer’s mind which is injected with a shot of melancholy by the song he has taken from Bonnie Prince Billy: “It’s time to be clear, got news of his passing …”
Christoph Tannert is curator and art historian and lives and works in Berlin