Jackson Markovic Supernature

Institute 193

215 North Limestone, Lexington, Kentucky 40507

Friday, April 18th
11:00am - 6:00pm EDT
Saturday, May 31st
11:00am - 6:00pm EDT

Supernature is infused with chemical reactions — inside darkrooms, inside plastics, inside desire itself. Boundaries dissolve between body and substance, image and material, pleasure and toxicity. The work metabolizes, pulses, and unsettles – mood stabilizers (Aripiprazole), photo processes (RA-4), and the slow alchemy of self-transformation course through its surfaces. The exhibition title references Cerrone's 1977 disco track — a winding anthem about pesticides. The song's form and content are almost antithetical, fusing lyrics that warn of toxic chemicals with rhythms that exude euphoria. Vitality and poison slip between one another.

Materially rooted in the surplus of commodity culture, Supernature repurposes second-hand remnants sourced from Metro Atlanta: expired darkroom paper, found acrylic scraps, vintage magazines, discarded lightboxes. Once a tool of seduction in advertising, the fluorescent glow of the lightbox is recontextualized, no longer selling products or lifestyles but illuminating fragments of Markovic's personal archive, as he takes stock of his own accumulations, materially and emotionally. The lightbox composites beam with melded plastics, faded stains, fingerprints, and stand-in bodies that bear the markings of desire with the passage of time.

In a series of lumen prints, pages torn from 1980s collector porn magazines are exposed in sunlight onto outdated darkroom paper (1980s–2010s), triggering unpredictable chemical reactions. Glossy bodies dissolve into streaks of light and residue, their nostalgic value destabilized. In this fragmented reconstruction of the gay image, Markovic reflects on his place within a lineage shaped by both intimacy and loss. The AIDS crisis ripples forward and backward in time, its aftershocks reverberating across generations. Figures fracture, radiate, and flicker between ecstasy and disintegration. History compresses as past and present converge onto a single surface.

What lingers, what mutates, what fades? Supernature exists between transformation and dissolution, tracing the residues of touch, time, and chemical entanglement.

-Mattie Pieschel