Grunt Gallery
Tuesday to Saturday
(except statutory holidays)
Noon - 5 pm
T: 604.875.9516
(except statutory holidays)
Noon - 5 pm
T: 604.875.9516
#116 - 350 East 2nd Ave
Vancouver, British Columbia
Canada V5T 4R8
Vancouver, British Columbia
Canada V5T 4R8

Title: The Symbolic Meaning of Tree
Artist: Christoph Runné
Opening: Thu, 12 January 2012, 7-11pm
Exhibition Dates: Fri, 6 January 2012 – Sat, 11 February 2012
Grunt gallery is pleased to present Christoph Runné’s 16mm film
installation entitled “Baum”. Through this work, Runné explores the
visual symbolism of the tree. While the human condition often seems
caught in cycles of hopelessness, homelessness, poverty, and
“uprooted-ness”, caused by socio-economic strife, wars, and refugeeism
despite great wealth, education, and promise which should be able to
allay suffering— Trees, in contrast, stand vigil; firmly rooted—
steadfast reminders of survival, regeneration, and hope within natures’
grander cycles. Man’s reflection on his place in nature is timeless, and
the poetic metaphors which trees inspire are as relevant in a
contemporary context as they were in antiquity.
Artist: Christoph Runné
Opening: Thu, 12 January 2012, 7-11pm
Exhibition Dates: Fri, 6 January 2012 – Sat, 11 February 2012
“Baum” uses multiple 16mm film projections to create a sparse and virtual forest that is traversed by a solitary figure that appears both rooted and moving throughout the frames. The cyclical and repetitive movement of the abstract wanderer suggests a passage of time, and a path through the subconscious as the drifter searches for his or her place. An attempt to give form to intangible abstractions, such as “longing” or “isolation,” is evident in the discontinuous flickering of the trees caused by the single-frame footage shot of a motion picture camera—a staccato movement suggestive of Morse-code communication or the arrhythmic pressing of typewriter keys.
Christoph Runné is a Vancouver-based experimental film, video, and installation artist. His work explores the unhidden yet seemingly invisible world around us. He creates visual tone poems with a humanitarian heartbeat whose minimalist and impressionistic methodology contradicts the complex human conditions with which Runné engages.