27/02/2023
It has been a while since I saw an exhibition by Jacobus Capone, but he never seems to disappoint. Memories of his 2007 art school grad work 'to love' flooded back. A five month durational project where he walked across Australia by foot, carrying a sample of water from the Indian Ocean in a suitcase. He released the water into the Pacific Ocean upon reaching Wollongong, NSW. It was a powerful display of the artist's dedication to his craft, and his connection to nature.
Capone’s exhibition, Falling from Earth, only goes further to embed him as an important figure in Australia’s contemporary art landscape. This work features a suite of seven paintings, photography, and a one-off live-streamed durational performance. The works explore the transformative properties that physical landscapes, the sea, and stars can have upon an individual's body and psyche. Capone's Devotional Paintings (7 Mountains & The Sea) were created through a process of reverence, devotion, and physical endurance. While on residency in Bergen, Norway, Capone would make daily ascents up one of seven mountains surrounding the city, gathering small samples of earth to be mixed with freshly retrieved seawater and applied as a wash onto canvas. (“Projects | MOORE CONTEMPORARY”) This ritual was repeated over hundreds of iterations to produce final works that act "as a conduit or medium between the sea and mountains to reveal something not seen or felt, but in existence."
Capone’s exhibition begins with a single photograph, Untitled (body as a constellation), imaginatively and metaphorically linking the image of a monochrome bodily surface with the idea of terrain or akin to a view of a constellation. It serves to bridge the exhibition of paintings with the physicality of the live stream performance tracing a darkness-to-dawn run, commencing at sundown on the 20th of February. (“Projects | MOORE CONTEMPORARY”) The live stream performance is a meditation on how landscapes, the sea, and stars all have an effect upon the body and psyche of the artist. The performance, which lasted until the following morning, took place on the south mole in Walyalup and involved the artist running overnight towards Sigma Octantis, the closest star to the south celestial pole.
Capone’s work is deeply rooted in process, meditation, and self-reflection, referencing Deleuze and Guattari's rhizome theory. The Devotional Paintings are a testament to Capone’s dedication to process, repetition, and ritual. The act of ascending a mountain daily, gathering earth, and applying it as a wash onto canvas is a process that required immense physical and mental endurance. The resulting paintings carry gentle traces of the poetic engagement that transpired between the artist and the environment.
Capone’s live stream performance, a journey towards Sigma Octantis, the closest star to the south celestial pole, is a metaphorical representation of the artist’s journey towards self-discovery and transformation. The performance is rooted in phenomenology, as the artist seeks to explore the subjective experience of these transformative properties.
Capone’s use of rhizome theory is evident in the way the Devotional Paintings are a manifestation of the artist’s engagement with the environment. The paintings act as a conduit or medium between the sea and mountains, revealing something that is not seen or felt, but in existence. The rhizome theory posits that knowledge is not hierarchical but is instead a network of connections and multiplicities. Capone’s paintings, in this sense, are a testament to the interconnectedness of all things and the infinite potential for transformation and growth.
Capone’s exhibition is a deeply introspective and transformative exploration, the artist’s use of process, meditation, self-reflection, and rhizome theory creates a deeply personal and immersive experience for the viewer. The Devotional Paintings are a testament to Capone’s dedication to process, repetition, and ritual, while the live stream performance is a meditation on the subjective experience of transformation and growth, drawing one deeper into the self and into a relationship with the world.
The performance begins with Capone's invitation to the viewer to connect with their own pulse, before taking them on a journey that is at once personal and universal. As he runs through the darkness, the viewer can see the abstract line of his route slowly growing on the screen, dividing it in two and metaphorically hinting at a self being separated from all earthly ties and turning towards the celestial. The line becomes expansive enough on the page, a powerful metaphor for the journey we all take towards self-discovery, a journey that is sometimes difficult to see but which ultimately leads us towards our true selves.
Through his performance, Capone proposes that the world is a non-hierarchical network of interconnected processes and ideas, rather than a structured system of order and control. Capone's journey is a rhizomatic one, with no predetermined destination or endpoint, but rather a constant process of becoming and transformation. His journey through the physical landscape is a way of exploring how the body and the psyche respond to the environment, and how our perceptions and experiences are shaped by our physical surroundings.
Falling from Earth is a powerful and evocative experience, Capone takes us on a journey that is at once personal and universal, a journey that explores the relationship between the self and the world, and the transformative power of the physical environment. Capone's work is a powerful testament to the importance of process, ritual, meditation, and self-reflexivity in the pursuit of self-discovery and creative expression. It is a work that resonates deeply with the viewer, inviting them to connect with their own experiences of the world and to contemplate the mysteries of the universe. So do yourself a favour and don't fail to see this exhibition its sure to leave a lasting impression on you.
http://moorecontemporary.com/projects/
https://fallingfromearth.net/words
Studio Photograph: courtesy of the artist