Press Release
In Mika Rottenberg’s Antimatter Factory the world is full of absurdities: a finger protrudes out of a wall; people sneeze meals onto a table and plastic mushrooms grow out of logs. The artist critically and humorously examines hyper-
International ongoing exhibitions
With Antimatter Factory the KunstHausWien is presenting an extensive insight into the multifaceted work of Mika Rottenberg. The exhibition presents her best-
The title of the exhibition, Antimatter Factory, refers to the name of a research department at CERN, the European Organisation for Nuclear Research in Geneva, which has been conducting experiments on antimatter. Mika Rottenberg partly filmed Spaghetti Blockchain (2019) at CERN, weaving together the complex processes of particle acceleration with seemingly mundane yet intricate human labor, with which the artist challenges perceptions of value, energy, and interconnected systems.
Questioning the boundaries between reality and fiction runs like a golden thread through Mika Rottenberg’s work. People and things appear to be set in motion, while space and time, past and future, seem to blend into one another. The people in her films are involved in various activities: they sneeze steaks, rabbits, light bulbs, or even whole meals on tables and plates; they moisten hair, feet, or buttocks; they sit amidst plastic goods or glittering garlands, waiting for customers. It feels as if Mika Rottenberg’s works were without any fixed spatial orientation points, such as above and below, inside and outside, and it is this that enables them to capture the contradictory nature of the twenty-
From a pearl farm to a wholesale market in East China specialising in small plastic articles, from the processing of instant meals to a factory producing antimatter—the artist uncovers in absurd and humorous narratives the connections between disparate locations, people, and resources, shedding light on our increasing alienation in a profit-
Karl Marx described labour as “society’s metabolism with nature”: it is through work that societies access and appropriate nature, producing waste matter which then re-
Mika Rottenberg, born 1976 in Buenos Aires, currently lives and works in New York.
Curators: Sophie Haslinger and Barbara Horvath
The exhibition Mika Rottenberg: Antimatter Factory is a cooperation of the KunstHausWien with the Museum Tinguely in Basel and the Lehmbruck Museum in Duisburg.
Supported by Hauser & Wirth.
Exhibition 27 February -
Mika Rottenberg, Lampshare, 2024. © Mika Rottenberg. Courtesy of the artist and Hauser & Wirth. Photo: Pete Mauney.
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