Alan Warburton
Soft Crash is a visual meditation on the financial collapse of 2008 and the subsequent public bank bailouts, austerity economics and recent trend towards nationalist isolationism. It's a visual rendering of a neoliberalist endgame, where wealth and power are trapped in a closed system for the 1%.
The concept was inspired by an unusual card game the artist played in 2004: at the point where one player should have won, the few remaining cards kept circulating endlessly in limited permutations. Unexpectedly, the game had reached a deadlock where no player could win. It was only after many rounds of play that the players realised something was wrong: one card was missing from the deck. This missing part had created the conditions for a kind of structural stability. No player could win, yet no player could lose so long as they continued circulating the cards. The free market of the game had become a cartel, a system of limited liability and risk based on collusion. Or an oligopoly, the stability of which curiously depended on a fundamental absence at the centre of the game.
Soft Crash speculates on the nature of that missing card. Is it the gold standard? The social contract? Or the 99%.
United Kingdom
Kendra Fleischman
"Abstract digital art piece combining live footage of ballet dancer with animated optical illusions using lines."
United States
Birch Cooper
"Video art piece constructed with computer generated sculpture and sound."
United States