tomas gabzdil libertiny: unbearable lightness

tomas gabzdil libertiny: unbearable lightness


'unbearable lightness'
125 x 125 x 48 cm
in an edition of 6 + 2AP
image courtesy of carpenters workshop gallery



during design miami / basel 2010, carpenters workshop gallery (london) presented
'unbearable lightness' by dutch designer tomáš gabzdil libertiny. suspended on four chains
and a hook, the small cabinet is a clean-room unit that has been built from custom
aluminium profiles, glass sheets and plastic inserts, elements which are typically used
in the automation industry.

for this specific event, the base plate of the glass was cut with a queen restrictor mesh.
over the course of the fair, 40 000 worker bees were released into the case to complete
a wax honeycomb structure over the figure of a martyred christ rising out of the chaos,
his weight seeming to be upheld by the mass strength of the swarm. the artist managed to
gain complete control over the bees and lure them to construct their hive precisely over
the figure within the vitrine that is made of a laser sintered framework. the industrious bees
created a honeycomb skin over the figure before filling each cell with the honey they produce.
then bees worked to remove the honey from the cells and return it to the beehive, cleaning the
martyred crhist back to the wax cells they originally created.



bees hard at work on the figure of the martyred christ
image courtesy of carpenters workshop gallery


libertiny's allegory engages us with his desire to manipulate and control a social wild-life entity
as the means to fulfilling the final product. here the bees, engaging in their repetitive natural process
while unknowingly creating the world's most recognized religious effigy. the suspended closed
cabinet references the strict boundaries of society where the toil of everyday duty is masked by
the hope of eternal rest in an after-life promised by the believer. the bees are programmed to act
for their queen who puppet-rules for libertiny. the viewer is able to recognize this element of
manipulation of the bees while ignorant to the invisible constraints and measures imposed
on our own existence. initially, tomáš introduced a natural red pigment into the mold which bees
spread evenly across the whole figure. the red relates to blood and flesh and is also the only color
in the visible spectrum that bees do not see.



the honeycomb skin the bees created
image courtesy of carpenters workshop gallery




designer tomáš gabzdil libertiny
image courtesy of design miami / basel




image courtesy of carpenters workshop gallery



bees hard at work
image courtesy of carpenters workshop gallery



andrea db
06.22.10  
18
bad idea
anyone   06.22.10
cool idea
blog.vladimirantonov.ru   06.22.10
been done before by Canadian Aganetha Dyck
[url=http://www.members.shaw.ca/ahtenaga/maskedball.html]maskedball[url]
c epp   06.22.10
Seen this 'technique' before as well, but for ID work, a vase I think. But I like this, and I like it better then Ms.Dyck's work, personally. Wondering how he colored the honey comb?
jk   06.22.10
nice work
mmm   06.22.10
it's always been done before it seems. Now there is variation of what has been done before, and this is a neat variation!
JTS   06.22.10
i think has more meaning here than in the case of the vase (droog).

they give color to the wax depending ond the kind of flower the bees colect
brodba   06.23.10
At first glance, I thought they used this technique:
theoryofeverythingcomics.com   06.23.10
its a bit Damien Hirst; The live bees (or flies), the crucifixion, the vitrine...
mugpunter   06.24.10
Incredibly cool idea.
bbaltimorebrown   06.24.10
Too bad Aganetha Dyck already thought of that several years ago in Winnipeg. I'm glad the internet doesn't let anyone get away with anything! :)
p   06.25.10
Garnet Puett
Bob   06.25.10
does that guy think he's christ
chrissakes:-(   06.25.10
awful. arrogant. anthropocentric. messianic. messy and nix.
'ideas' themselves are boring now -thanks to the marketing of cleverness in art (the idiot child of conceptual art). especially offensive are 'ideas' that exploit other creatures, even other species, and basically enslave them into performing a shallow, flaccid, self promoting art production. bees, mold, flies, trees, pollen, hundreds of naked people.. all the same

in this case it's proof positive that bees are better architects, artists, designers, crafters, cooks, material developers etc, than any human. they only seem to lack the capacity to strike, to refuse to go to work

for fools
revere   06.25.10
oh and.. bees to not require the unbearably self important and horrific superstition of a bronze age sun god sacrificing his son to redeem them from sin. they just get on with making honey
revere   06.25.10
Yes Aganetha Dyck pioneered the thought and the technique. Where he has taken it, is uniquely his own. Nice though, when hommage is paid to the initiator.
Elder   06.26.10
nothing new I think. As always, the man forces the nature to follow shapes created by him. spectacular work of bees, not of designers!
ari   06.28.10
Sorry, I admire the creativity but it leaves a lump in my stomach considering the plight of honey bees (especially in the USA) as a result of man's manipulation of their immune system (for profit, what's new?) and the very real possibility of their extinction and ensuing consequences for mankind. Or haven't you heard?
Mike Scott   06.28.10

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