With the exhibition Grand Central, Valentin Ruhry opens up associative realms for reflection on the sociocultural process of change that was initiated by the Internet as the dominant utopia of our time and offers a subtle criticism of the experiential dimension of contemporary consumer culture. For his solo exhibition at the MAK, the artist, whose work is situated between sculpture
and conceptual art, developed a large-scale installation that formally and aesthetically alludes to the corporate design of product displays by international makers of digital products. With the exhibition title Grand Central, Ruhry both directly and figuratively references the topic of decentralization, an integral component of the digital world against the background of the global networking and analysis of people, products, and data through digital media and social networks. He also points to the location where one company known around the world for its computer technologies has operated one of its largest stores since 2011: Grand Central Terminal in New York, which is frequented by 750,000 people daily.
With the almost sacred quality of their product displays, the seductive aesthetics of their products, and the ostensibly self-evident nature of their presence amid large expanses of public space, corporations—particularly those that produce digital innovations— subliminally play with consumer desire. In his minimalist installation, Ruhry addresses the subtle displays found in these stores and presents a selection of everyday objects cast in aluminum from the context of the train station in place of digital devices. Made abstract due to their materiality and elevated as unique items, their auratic presentation simultaneously enhances them and separates them from their original utility and commercial value. The emotional, affirmative messages of companies in the digital sector cause their customers to overlook the fact that by buying a product or joining a network, not only are they giving up control over their own identity and personal information, but they are also contributing to the closed loop of an increasingly independent market.