Title: Untitled (Identity Statements Series) 2016 Chromogenic print (C Print) 18 x 24 cm. Edition of 50 numbered and signed copies. Signed, titled and numbered with permanent marker on the back of the photo. Certificate of authenticity signed by the artist is included.
- Imanol Marrodan. Bilbao 1964 An interdisciplinary creator and researcher, his work includes performing critical work through various events related to art and contemporary thinking as part of his personal creative project. The concept of the limit, inspired by the idea of the ancient Roman "limes" cited by Eugenio Trias as a metaphor for a civilized, rationally controlled knowledge, is the starting point for a concept of limit that is not understood as the end of anything, but as a means for the "beginning" of growth and evolution. This idea of seeking and exploring the unknown and of personal identity related to natural processes and rhythms is the central theme of Imanol Marrodán's work. The goal is to create an ever-broadening Atlas of meanings with different meanings. We propose the construction of a metalanguage encompassing the different stages and experiences experienced as mental structures formed metaphorically by Euclidean geometries and at the same time also by structures of fractal and intuitive organic thinking. It is precisely the process of formation of an experience that shares a socio-political habitat in an industrial, materialistic, technological and artificial world, as opposed to a natural environment closely linked to the laws of the universe, which we hardly know but which we still feeling and intuitive. He has exhibited in countries such as the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Portugal, Belgium, Korea, Argentina, Chile, Switzerland and the United States. His work has been shown at international contemporary art fairs such as ARCO, VALENCIA ART, ARTE SANTANDER and DFOTO (Spain), ART COLOGNE and KUNST KÖLN (Germany), KIAF (Seoul, Korea), ArteBA (Buenos Aires, Argentina), BALELATINA (Basel , Switzerland)...etc... His work can be found in public and private collections in Asia, the United States and Europe.