Dry Pixels And Wet Molecules

Alex Fischer, Solo Exhibition, 2013.09.30 at O'Born Contemporary

In Dry Pixels And Wet Molecules Alex Fischer counter-poses the primordial origins of biology against today's dominant technology-based vernacular. In earnest, the artist acknowledges through his practice elements peculiar to the time of his being. Put in alternative terms, Fischer concedes that the acts of being and becoming are wholly different now than at any time in our recent or distant past.

Dry Pixels And Wet Molecules poses a valuable and contemporary question using sensory terms--can the digital reconcile With the physical? The works of art comprising this materially varied exhibition reveal themselves as both answers to and instigators of this question. Through digital manipulations, sculpture, and installation, Fischer convinces his audience that technology is not simply an imbricate to the physical and the palpable but rather supersedes both.

The multi-modal moment in which art-making has found itself produces what could be called moist media, a curious but worthwhile corollary to the Mcluhan's cold media of days past. Absorbing this idea, Fischer wedges himself between the dry, cold of the pixel and the wetness of biomolecules. Ultimately suggesting that we are living in a post-digital world, the artist exposes a tactility and precision with his imagery that in effect surpasses the daily surroundings we perceive with our own eyes and bodies.

– Alex Fischer, Fall 2013