Aquarius
public project
river Wilga mouth into the Vistula, Cracow


2009, as part of Art Boom Festival


Aquarius

The Aquarius project is a sculpture sunk in the waters of the river Wilga, near where it joins the Vistula in Cracow. It is virtually invisible.


The Aquarius is the figure of a bishop, in a crouched position, with a mitre on his head, stretching out his hand and touching the bottom as if searching for a lost object. It is a life-sized figure, made of white-coloured concrete in which small spiral black snail shells have been embedded. Submerged in water, the figure slowly becomes part of the river, catching in the folds of its robe all kinds of objects or plants carried by the current. Nearby a sewage outlet is located so the water also carries sewage waste. The form, gradually corrupted by the water, should disappear in some years' time. Within four months it became completely black.


For now, the bishop lives according to the rhythm of the river - appearing when the water level drops and disappearing when it rises. For most of the time, the figure remains invisible, and all that can be seen from a bridge 30 metres away is a white shape looming under the water surface.


Aquarius is a project that can be imagined only. From the formal point of view, it is an experiment concerning the functioning of public sculptures - discreet, on the verge of visibility. And although this is a figurative sculpture, it is a figuration that can be reactivated only by the power of one's imagination, because all that is visible is a blurry white form.


 

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Art of Public Possibility. Joanna Rajkowska in Conversation with
Artur Żmijewski    

Milliodimensional Reality,
Joanna Rajkowska talks to
Magda Pusto³a