“Daniel Hölzl’s solo exhibition, is permeated with carbon and wax, crucial substances in the structure and operations of human technol- ogies such as aviation...These materials find their way into Hölzl’s works through a series of wax paintings on carbon fiber, ready-made components, and sculptural parts, all of which are in some way extracted from the aviation industry and connected to notions of being grounded. GROUNDED is not just the presentation of a series of works by an artist, but the creation of a unified yet complex world made up of substances, materials, and forms that reflect the conceptual, historical, and social concerns guiding the artist’s research and practice. By reconstituting the entire gallery as an “aviatorial space,” Hölzl establishes a setting for probing reflections on the connections between nature, science, and industrialization through the overlapping history of aviation technologies and the recently renewed European legacy of war and conflict, highlighting the integral role of petroleum.
While possessing abstract qualities associated with formalism, GROUNDED points to aviation’s dangers and limitations, rendering its exist- ing characteristics like petroleum dependency and utilization in permanent wars around the world as already outmoded, grotesque, and nostalgic.