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Hanz Koontz Art and Social Systems

Pulverised by propaganda

Pseudonyms Collaboration

Architectonics

Conflict War Propoganda 1 Concept Layer 2 Architectonics 1

Drawings

Drawings by contemporary British artist Ranjit Singh

Conceptual

Art by contemporary British artist Ranjit Singh tin of beans

Timeline

Art Index

Pseudonyms | Title

Ranjit Singh Autobiographical art

Work in progress | Out Of Sync

Ranjit Sahota Architectonics | Drawings

Charles Archie

Charles Archie | Randomly Embedded Misprint | For the Love of Money

Desmond Tate

Desmond Tate: Not Quite Sugar Free  | Cleansing to a Brilliant White

Hanz Koontz

Pulverised by Propaganda | Let Me Liberate You

Ranjit Singh

Conflict and Consciousness | Surplus Worker| Working Class Crime / Corporate Crime|

Maintaining Underdevelopment |  Designed in Germany Made in China | Reconditioned |

Beyond the Point of Restriction | Re-distribution of Knowledge | Something to do with

Rembrandt


 

In progress

Angry Jesus | American Intelligence | Reinventing a rat  | Syria open house |

Synthetic Symbolism

   

1998-2013


1994-2013

1994-2013

2009 - 2010

2013

The artists work covers a wide range of enquiry: economic systems which govern our lives, artistic autonomy, extending the ongoing theories / variations which continually shift with economic forces within art institutions and private galleries. Economic controls which manipulate artistic production, value, validation and public perception of art / artists are referenced within the artists work and theoretical studies. The artist aims to maintain full economic control over his work.

The use of different names is used by the artist as well, creating racial diversity, allowing investigation of various issues in relation to the pseudonyms employed.


My intention is to look at just one aspect of the artists work. The artist casts a critical eye on the paradigm of economic / social infrastructure of the Western World. Deconstructing our systems, their signifiers and signifieds in order to conceptualise the effects such systems have on our lives. Showing connections between third world debt to individual debt and how these systems control our lives.


By use of conceptual and associative engineering, the artist engages the viewer with alternative forms of visual language / thinking. A critique which delivers a thought provoking insight into aspects of the economic strata. Removal of initial subject from its context into the world of art, allows the artist to isolate and point to a subtext, promoting a different way of perceiving the synthetic political / economic strategies imposed upon us.


The tower of Lego bricks with a single house brick placed on top, points to a system which negates a beneficial set of conditions to developed countries and through the interlocking Lego bricks proves how much we are locked into

A way of thinking / conditioning. Becoming a prisoner in our own system.


The artist also points to crime on individual and corporate levels. The small tin of beans next to a receipt with no record of the transaction re-enforces the pettiness of an act (in some cases seen as an act of survival ) when seen in proportion to the acquisition of billions through corporate crime shown in another piece.


The artist questions the whole system, how we become economic units of production. Surplus Workers references emigration / capital export, the masses as units to be exploited. Through out the work, the artist creates a resonance which tunes into issues continually surfacing in our political, economic and social systems.


A. Pendleton. Practising Artist / Lecturer in Art & Design.


Text by A. Pendleton.

1999-2005

 Shelley Tower Arts Project Birmingham


Hanz Koontz Art and Social Systems


2014 - 2023