AIR ELECTRIC: REIMAGINING ENERGY IN ART

Michael Sailstorfer | CARBON 12, Dubai, UAE

Michael Sailstorfer 'Air Electric 4', 2025, Copper, Electro-Galvanic, 50 x 40 cm (Courtesy of CARBON 12 and the Artist)

AIR ELECTRIC is Michael Sailstorfer’s fourth solo exhibition with CARBON 12 gallery, bringing together three series of  works that explore a subject that couldn’t be more relevant today, and has long been one of the artist’s  signature themes: energy. 

Sailstorfer reflects on energy in its various forms – as a source, as storage, as a transmitter, as working  material – in short, as fuel for life.  

The sculptural series C-Batterie, an homage to one of Sailstorfer’s artistic role models, Joseph Beuys, plays  with common notions of classical sculpture such as eternity, uniqueness and preconceived values. At first  glance, the five bronze casts on white pedestals seem to fulfil these ideas: an eternal, precious material,  presented as a unique sculpture on a traditional plinth – a monument to energy. But is this really the case? 

Referencing Joseph Beuys’ Capri-Batterie (1985), an edition of 200 made from common, perishable  materials, the original work consists of a bright yellow light bulb in a socket connected to a lemon. By using  the lemon as a source of energy, Beuys demonstrated that all forms of energy come from nature and that  nature’s resources are limited. Accompanied by instructions to replace the battery every 1000 hours, Beuys  emphasized the precarity of our finite resources. The two components of the Capri battery are similar in size,  shape and color; perfectly in harmony, suggesting that the tension between the finite resources of nature  and the demands of technological development can be balanced. 

Sailstorfer’s adaptation upsets this very balance – an allegory for societal inequality, portrayed with humor  and contradiction. He creates wax models of the original Capri battery, places them in beehives and leaves  the bees to work on them. After a few months, the molds are removed and cast in bronze. The resulting work  feels as if nature has taken over, with honeycomb structures growing all over the original forms, destabilizing  and questioning the so-called balance, as well as capturing the transience and the creative energy of the  moment. Another set of casts made from ordinary lightbulbs, using the same process, are suspended from  the ceiling with reference to their original function. 

As so often, Sailstorfer introduces the element of chance in his work which contrasts with the more deliberate  medium choice. Bronze is one of the most valuable metals in the recycling industry, its ability to be recycled  with minimal loss of quality makes it not only a precious metal, but also an environmentally friendly one. This  ecological concern closes the circle, connecting the two artists from different generations. 

Sailstorfer’s latest series AIR ELECTRIC – from which the exhibition takes its title – follows on from his previous  exhibition at CARBON 12 (2022) by further exploring the idea of landscape painting with innovative and  novel techniques. Deeply interested in experimenting with the transformative qualities of industrial materials,  Sailstorfer turns electricity into his painting medium. A very thin copper fabric is stretched over a wooden  frame, while a power supply unit provides a constant flow of direct current. The negative pole is connected  to the conductive copper mesh. The positive pole is connected to a stainless-steel rod with a fleece-covered  tip, which is used as a “brush.” The fleece is immersed in a silver electrolyte. When the brush touches the  copper mesh, the circuit closes and the silver ions from the electrolyte combine with the copper. The result is  an abstract, electric landscape of pale blue cloud formations against a golden sky. Occasionally, certain  shapes can be made out through the web of clouds, but the interpretation of the work is ultimately left to  the viewer. The series seems to stem from a distant past, and we are only slowly realizing the many layers  of history that lie beneath it.

Once again, Sailstorfer leads us to believe that the outcome is determined by chance, this, and the choice of  material, offers a clear connection between the two series. There is an intrinsic link between the two materials,  bronze consists of at least 60 per cent copper. Moreover, copper has many desirable properties that are  yet to be surpassed by any other material, making it indispensable in industry. 

Going back in time, the exhibition closes with a new addition to one of Sailstorfer’s older series: the Tank  series (since 2020). Tank 11 (2024) consists of an empty Audi fuel tank, deprived of its original function and  context by being hung on the wall. The tank takes on anthropomorphic features, reminiscent of oceanic masks  from a bygone era. A breathing sound fills the last part of the room, reminding us that energy in any given form is always fuel for life. 

AIR ELECTRIC by Michael Sailstorfer opens for view on April 15, 2025 - 23 May, 2025, at CARBON 12, Dubai, UAE.

3rd April, 2025 Visual Art | Paintings

GET YOUR LATEST COPY OF ARTRA MAGAZINE