The Reality Gap vs Archeology in the Digital Age

At first I could see nothing, the hot air escaping from the chamber causing the candle flame to flicker, but presently, as my eyes grew accustomed to the light, details of the room within emerged slowly from the mist, strange animals, statues, and gold everywhere the glint of gold. For the moment an eternity it must have seemed to the others standing by - I was struck dumb with amazement.”

Howard Carter on entering the tomb of Tutankhamun

Discovery perches at the edge of a precipice, beyond which a void beckons. What would happen if one day we discovered the secrets of the human brain. Would we understand ourselves differently? Would such knowledge fry our circuitry and destroy our consciousness such as it is now? Are the gaps in our knowledge a purposeful kill switch to avoid us from discovering what we truly are and the nature of our relationship to the universe? Does a god, or many gods, look down upon us in an act of benign magnanimity as we go about our daily business in possession of free will, or is the universe indifferent to our existence?

The work of Jeffrey Knopf is something akin to an archeological dig. Ancient history through the lens of digital technology. It seems like the perfect moment in our own living history to view the past from a point that we have not quite reached, the point where existential dread has crept into mainstream thought around the significance of AI (artificial intelligence). Just like Douglas Adams’ Restaurant At The End of The Universe, where intergalactic travellers can visit a point in the future where, night after night, guests witness the collapse of the universe and the end of history, the end is in sight but remains tantalisingly just out of reach. The future beyond the eventual end of everything is still a dimension that we cannot experience. 

What happens after I die
A lot happens after you die, it just doesn’t involve you
 

It’s Not All Black and White (2023) Jeffrey Knopf

Even if we were to crack the ability to travel in the fourth dimension -time- we can never experience the dimension that is the feeling of death, as from death there is no return. And this is our kill switch. Ensuring that some things remain a mystery. 

And so Jeffrey takes us from our current moment in time, with its imperfect technology, and places us back in an ancient world also incomplete but longing to be explored. On the opening night of Knopf’s Metaphorical Museum, more than one visitor likened the descent of our narrow staircase from kitchen to basement as how Howard Carter must have felt entering the tomb of Tutankhamun, opened for the first time in thousands of years. The darkness gathers and the outside world recedes into the background. Down here in the half-light of the underworld we are experiencing the preserved death of history. Through this preservation of the body beyond death we can learn about their life and the nature of their death, but what happens beyond continues to be a mystery. 

We teeter on the precipice, wobbling back and forth, knowing that when the time comes we must step into the void to complete our knowledge knowing that there is no way back. 

Escape Roulette (2023) Jeffrey Knopf

A head and an arm struggle to escape from a red plastic bag, hung from a small meat hook. Like a slab of Serrano ham dangling from the ceiling as Jeffrey observes, or maybe organs being weighed to judge the weight of a soul before entering the realm of the dead. Elsewhere Akhenaten looks down on us, alongside him sits his hypercubic counterpart from the future. Here history is abstracted, just as we have blind spots so too does the camera. As with human imagination, the camera guesses at the information it cannot read. 

What would Freud say about all of this? Well he would probably sit back and contemplate the historical objects laid out before him on his desk. We too can do this through Jeff’s scans from the Freud Museum in London. Yet, with the elongation of time and space, the display becomes like a series of frozen waterfalls, objects reduced to a series of planes, a panoramic view of history, moving and revealing itself at a glacial pace but always remaining somehow out of reach.

Laid out on the window shelf between front and rear exhibition spaces, is a structure that will be familiar to those that have followed BasementArtsProjects’ ‘Jacob’s Ladder’ project with Keith Ackerman. Here the stages are laid out from left to right. The isolated staircase, rough with sprues and bleeds from the casting process in aluminium, before being transferred into a golden coloured 3D print of the entire sculpture in plastic. Next to this the staircase, again isolated, 3D printed in gold plastic and to the right of that, two more isolated staircases further refined and printed in a translucent space age plastic and presented in a pyramidal shape. Adding to the futurist egyptological feeling of this exhibition.

Just as when Howard Carter entered he tomb of Tutenkhamun not knowing what to expect, the same can be said of The Metaphorical Museum and The Underworld. We encourage you to descend into this subterranean chamber featuring the work of Jeffrey Knopf and make of it what you will. Is this an exhibition display or buried works in which it was never known whether or not living eyes would view these objects again. And so, in the spirit of archeology in the digital age I shall leave you with this list of works, but . . . .

Of course our desire to understand as much of the world as possible means that we will always strive to uncover as much of the past as we can.

I am not going to tell you which artwork is which or even provide a map, that is for you the archeologist to search, and find, and work out the answers.

And so, the ultimate mystery persists . . .  

Bruce Davies | June 2023


List of Works

Escape Roulette
Round and Round
Resonance
Opposing Views
Title Not Known
Tara’s Piano
Title Not Known
The Closest I Got To Freud’s Desk 1
The Closest I Got To Freud’s Desk 2
The Closest I Got To Freud’s Desk 3
The Closest I Got To Freud’s Desk 4
The Closest I Got To Freud’s Desk 6
Akhenaten
Antennae 1
Antennae 2
Mothers Meeting
Archaic Imposter
Not Everything Is Black and White
Once Was Hermes Now is Evri
Disembodied
Uncanny
The Closest I Got To Freud’s Desk 1 (Aluminium cast)
Troublesome Lion
Troublesome Lions
Title Not Known
A Show of Hands
Frogs Legs
The Acrobats
Ooh Me Back
Unexplained
David Exits His Body
Origins
David