Archive2021

Diego Bianchi

Diego Bianchi, Inflation, 2021. Installation view at Lewis's Building, Liverpool Biennial 2021. Photography: Stuart Whipps

Diego Bianchi, Inflation, 2021. Installation view at Lewis's Building, Liverpool Biennial 2021. Photography: Stuart Whipps

Diego Bianchi, Inflation, 2021. Installation view at Lewis's Building, Liverpool Biennial 2021. Photography: Stuart Whipps

Diego Bianchi, Inflation, 2021. Installation view at Lewis's Building, Liverpool Biennial 2021. Photography: Stuart Whipps

Diego Bianchi, Inflation, 2021. Installation view at Lewis's Building, Liverpool Biennial 2021. Photography: Stuart Whipps

Diego Bianchi, Inflation, 2021. Installation view at Lewis's Building, Liverpool Biennial 2021. Photography: Stuart Whipps

Diego Bianchi (b. 1969, Buenos Aires, Argentina) lives and works in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Bianchi envisions artistic practice as a space for trial and error – rehearsing the situations he creates by embracing a level of uncertainty. Through installation, sculpture and performance, Bianchi explores the processes of obsolescence and decay, as well as the absurd connections that exist between things in the world. He punctuates the worth of ‘worthless’ entities through utilising them in his immersive spatial environments. Recent exhibitions include Bienalsur, Argentina (2019); Buenos Aires Museum of Modern Art, Argentina (2017); Perez Art Museum, USA (2015); and The Latin American Art Museum of Buenos Aires, Argentina (2015).

Project Description

Diego Bianchi presented a site-specific installation at The Lewis’s Building. Bianchi is interested in how we are connected to objects and how they affect our everyday life; his works reconfigure our perceptions to create a spatial configuration indistinct of bodies and things. For his installation, Bianchi processed discarded objects, mostly car parts, and organic matter such as bioplastics – trying to force integration between conflicting worlds. The structures were complemented by the familiar, though often obscured sounds of the by-products of living bodily systems in their normal day-to-day functions, such as snoring, passing wind, exhalations and sighs. These sounds became the soundtrack to a series of videos where the adventures of strange characters with exceeded bodies were recorded. Creating environments that maintain an abstract quality mixed with precarity and humour, Bianchi’s fictional machinery of work replicates the process of the digestive system.

Commissioned by Liverpool Biennial with support from Amalia Amoedo and Érica Roberts.

Our full exhibition programme is now closed, but visitors can still enjoy art in person at FACT and Bluecoat until August & September. Plan your visit here.