Niels Lyhne Løkkegaard

Incompleting places – surrection and mirage making through topocosmological hypering

What happens when that which saturates the foreground is relegated to the background? And what emerges when we attend to what appears distant, yet at the same time remains strangely familiar? 

This exposition explores what happens when we listen to the background in both a spatial and temporal sense and examines what happens when various materials of language are brought into the foreground as well as in the background. 

What can these materials tell us when we listen? – and how can we enter into dialogue with these materials? 

The exposition approaches language as a materiality encompassing visuality as language, sound as language and the written and spoken word as language, and the exposition explores what happens when these languages change positions. 

Taking as its point of departure the dual meaning of background – both as the spatial background that is physically distant and as the structural background internalized over time and which (paradoxically) saturates our foreground – the exposition examines how proximity and distance shape how we listen, and how displacements between foreground and background might surrect modes of listening through which places are rendered incomplete.

Biography

Niels Lyhne Løkkegaard works within an artistic practice spanning composition, sound art, performance, and visual art. He considers his work a form of basic research into realities and is interested in how bubble-like systems unfold as saturated human conditions.
Collisions between individual bodies and bubble-bodies of saturated matter are key drivers in Løkkegaard’s practice, and he is particularly interested in how to engage with this saturated state — seeking to soften what has become sedimented and to create ruptures within the saturated.
As a paradoxical strategy, Løkkegaard often works with the idea that reaching points of saturation may itself function as a countermeasure to the saturated. In other words, he explores how bodies can be saturated to such a degree that they collapse under their own (over)saturated weight and thereby become something else — something more wobbly.
Niels Lyhne Løkkegaard is based in Copenhagen and was educated at the RMC and the School of Architecture at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts.