Tomo Savić Gecan, Untitled 2025

Kula Gallery, Split

On the subsequently constructed but stationary wall of Kula Gallery, a seemingly simple sentence offers visitors an explanation of the performance: “As part of the ‘Untitled 2025’ project at Kula Gallery in Split, the performer calculates his position within the gallery – without using electronic devices – based on the temperature in Split, the presence of visitors, global emoji usage, and the current number of planes in the sky.” While the text appears transparent, it actually opens up a space of radical uncertainty. While the performance’s parameters may appear specific at first, they seem unrelated and almost random – their relationship to the outcome (the performer’s position in the space) remains completely obscure. Even if executed with the aid of sophisticated technology, their rationale would still be enigmatic. This gives rise to a key question: how do we interpret the performance when it has no basis in recognised epistemological structures?

Central to the work is the performer’s body positioned behind a movable table, a body that shifts, yet without mechanical predictability, guided by an internal performance logic hidden from the observer. In this context, ‘Untitled 2025’ expresses the tension between the declarative (parameters as a model of reality) and the actual (a tangible but elusive performance). Simultaneously, the gallery space is both constructed and stripped of subjectivity: it is no longer perceived through the stable coordinates of the observer’s gaze, but as a dynamic interplay of uncertain variables that suggest an algorithm rather than a coherent system of meaning.

Tomo Savić Gecan’s work invites us to consider the relationship between perception, measurement, and presence: between what can be precisely located and what unfolds beyond the scope of understanding. The visitor is activated not through traditional participation, but as a variable element within a system that generates the very conditions of the performance. In a subtle yet deeply destabilising manner, ‘Untitled 2025’ explores the way in which contemporary logic of data collection – even when merely referenced – redefines our understanding of the body, space, and the reality of the artistic act.

Dalibor Prančević