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Cologne Contemporaries, 22 November, 2008, 12 - 20 Uhr / 12 - 8 pm
 
 
Cologne Contemporaries 22 November 2008
 
 
Cologne Contemporaries
ist ein Zusammenschluss von acht aussichtsreichen Galerien für zeitgenössische Kunst, die in den letzten zwei Jahren ihre Ausstellungsräume in Köln eröffnet haben.

Cologne Contemporaries is an alliance between eight of the most promising contemporary art venues to have opened their galleries in the city of Cologne in the last two years.
 
22.11.2008

Galerie-Rundgang/Gallery tour: 12 - 20 Uhr/12 - 8 pm
Party: ab 21 Uhr/from 9 pm
 
Sebastian Brandl, Cologne
Clages, Cologne
Figge von Rosen Galerie, Cologne
Galerie Julia Garnatz, Cologne
Galerie Christian Lethert, Cologne
Marion Scharmann, Cologne
Schnittraum//Lutz Becker, Cologne
TEAPOT, Cologne
 
 
Sebastian Brandl, Cologne
 
 
Marcelo Viquez, untitled, 2008 
 
 
Marcelo Viquez
SOLO


25 October - 20 December 2008

Mallorca-basedpainter, sculptor, draftsman and video artist Marcelo Viquez (*1971, Montevideo) will be showing new works at Sebastian Brandl for his first solo exhibition in Germany. The artist will be exhibiting nearly 20 drawings, a sculpture and a video.
As with all of Viquez' work, the title of the exhibition has a story or personal significance: the word 'solo' (Spanish for alone) is used here as a double-wordplay, reflecting not only the work's content but also the artist's own life and character.

Viquez speaks enthusiastically about his time as a drummer in a punk band that was once the centre of his life. For him, the regular garage band practices with other musicians in a district of Palma de Mallorca were as holy as they were indispensable; most of the time and contact he had with other human beings revolved around these gatherings. The musicians came together to release pent-up energy as they saw fit, drawing new energy from it in the process.

In the exhibition, Viquez tells the story of his break with the group, his voluntary decision but its inevitable course, his emancipation. He quit because he was no longer able to work with others in a group, because he felt limited and tied to working in a certain, well-worn way, exhausted by the very thing he loved the most.
Viquez' life is profoundly affected by the non-conformist and rebellious streak in his character, though this was also his ticket to freedom of expression in the end as he disregarded the numerous benefits and comforts of a normal, ordinary life. His story acts as a key to the drawings, decoding them as testament to a process, the break and rebirth of a freed artist who, in this way, also becomes a visual chronicler of his own life.

Viquez' work bears resemblance to the aesthetic and iconography of comic books, graffiti and Pop Art. The newest drawings signify not only a break with his routines, but also the departure from a type often attributed to his work. He casts aside the very labels that had been applied to his art works until now, assuming position that is much more realistic and photographic.
The rhythm of the mosaic formed by the mid-sized drawings (29 x 39 cm) is disturbed by two large-format works (156 x 129; 117,5 x 132 cm) in particular: a self-portrait of the artist sitting on a drum stool with drumsticks in his hands next to the instrument itself, with writing that reads 'Amistad Tenuitas' and the sentence 'one day is fine next is black'.

The drawings play technically with pencil, ball-point pen, charcoal or as a collage in combination with words or written statements augmenting the iconography and comments, quotes, thoughts or direct references to his own person.
In this way, for example in his drawing with the word 'attitude': a term is reconverted back in to the key word for the exhibition and his own personal raison d'être. It is Viquez' attitude that causes him pain, gives him freedom and marks his 'solo' path. Or the piece with the word 'Amistad' (Span. for friendship), with which the artist shows how his break with the band was a necessary step for his own individuality, but did not affect his friendship with other members of the band. The drawing with the spiked collar can also be understood in this context, as it symbolizes the separating paths.

The video showing the artist autobiographically playing drums brings to mind a certain melancholy, though this is quickly shattered by the volume of the instrument designating a rhythm and a new path. The short film summarizes a personal story: solo, alone, immersed in his own universe, a lonely artist, a 21st century bohemian.

Marcelo Viquez's work has been exhibited in numerous group exhibitions in Spain, Uruguay, Korea, Holland and Germany, as well as in the most important cultural institutions in Mallorca. Sanahuja, the Fundación Barceló collection, in the Palma de Mallorca city hall or the Consell of Mallorca.

Suzana Mihalic


Image:
Marcelo Viquez
untitled, 2008
Acrylic, charcoal, coloured crayon on paper
156 x 124 cm
Courtesy of Sebastian Brandl
 
 
Sebastian Brandl
Brüsseler Str. 4
50674 Köln
T +49 (0) 221.222 99 793
F +49 (0) 221.222 99 792.
Öffnungszeiten/ Opening hours
Di - Fr  13.00 - 18.00 Uhr/Tue - Fri  1 - 6 pm
Sa  12.00 - 16.00 Uhr/Sa 12 - 4 pm
und nach Vereinbarung/and by appointment
 

 
 
Clages, Cologne
 
 
Shila Khatami, falling dots, 2008 

 
Shila Khatami
Ping Pong


October 24 to December 14, 2008

In music theory, "counterpoint" refers to the technique of adding a second voice to the first in the course of a melody. A harmonic complement, the second line of notes counters the first while following its own melodic rules. Shila Khatami uses a similar method in her work, combining a vocabulary of gestural abstraction with that of geometric minimalism. Here, the musical "note-against-note" becomes a painterly ping-pong, with both approaches asserting themselves independently of one another, reacting to each other at the same time.

The works in the artist's first solo exhibition at Galerie Clages speak to this very interplay. Two holed pieces of hardboard lean against a wall in the center of the space. The boards are slightly offset from one another, differentiating the surface: the openings in the wooden planks overlap, the paint-dripped space peeking through the holes shows a striking second color through the first, even the white walls are visible, becoming part of the sculpture. The layers blur completely in the transition: the regular pattern is camouflaged by the changing structures, and interferences foil the strict pattern on the boards. The same principle is also visible in the paintings: Shila Khatami constructs geometric forms with painterly means, distorted by the expressive color and clearly visible traces of the artistic process. 

The play with contradicting, differentiating concepts is a striking feature of much of the artist's work. Born 1976 in Saarbrücken, Khatami often uses industrially manufactured, perforated hardboard as templates for geometric patterns, often using them directly as a canvas. It is through this layering of various paints, softly diffused surfaces, pastose streaks of color and strictly defined forms and lines that Khatami develops a variety of textures - adding to them again and again in a rhythm of "counterpoints". The structuring elements always seem ready to dissolve at any moment - and yet it is through them that a carefully constructed, balanced interdependence of consonants and dissonants emerges.


Image:
Shila Khatami
falling dots
Lacquer on hardboard
50 x 35 cm
2008


Clages
Brüsseler Strasse 5
D-50674 Köln
T +49.221.99209181
F +49.221.1794288
Tue-Sat 11-5 p.m.

Clages
 
 
 
Figge von Rosen Galerie, Cologne
 

Bas de Wit, Raise and Shine, 2008 

Bas De Wit
'...the musical'
 
Nov 25 - Jan 17, 2009
 
On November 22, 2008 we proudly present  with "...the musical" our second solo exhibition of the young Dutch painter and sculptor Bas de Wit (*1977), who recently won the Royal Award of Painting of the Netherlands.


Image:
Bas de Wit
Raise and Shine
2008
190 x 150 cm
Acrylic on Canvas
Courtesy of Figge von Rosen Galerie

Figge von Rosen Galerie
Aachener Straße 65
50674 Cologne
T +49 221 27056840
F +49 221 27056849
Tue - Fri 11am - 6pm
Sat 12 - 5pm

 
 
 
Galerie Julia Garnatz, Cologne
 
 
Ilona Herreiner  
 
 
Ilona Herreiner
Above the clouds and below

October 25 - December 20, 2008

In her second solo show at gallery Julia Garnatz, Ilona Herreiner once more presents herself as an outstanding wood sculptress. Typical for Herreiner, also the new sculptures were created in work cycles.

One of the two new work groups consists of three large riding figures. On goat, cock or double-headed horse, strangely disfigured male figures are posed. Frog face, wood leg or extremely short extremities distort the view onto the otherwise very masculine bodies. The up to 200 cm high figures are carved round plastic, with no main view side. Small scenarios unconsciously lead the onlooker's motion. They almost force the viewer to move around the sculpture, to bend, or strain. On the discovery journey of odd scenarios one can find a dick sucking little red devil, or small monsters crawling up the neck, a spawning cock, a small toad migration, or wondrous bird creatures. In these rider figures experience merges with the fantastic, and the cipher like encoded seeing of the artist. Do we stand in fort of modern horsemen of the Apocalypse or simply in front of burlesque fellows, displaying their inadequacies as on a Vanity Fair? There are surely no limits to the possibilities of association. This work complex follows the group of the likewise colored large female sculptures, last shown in Karlsruhe and Berlin (EnBW).

The three-dimensionality of Herreiner's figures is even extended in her latest work cycle. In dollhouse manner, stages, with rear walls and actors, never more then three, are carved from the tree trunk. These, approx. up to 50 cm high scenes are waiting, as in Standby mode, for arousing through the view of the onlooker. Crude to uncanny back room fantasies come to live and contrast the bourgeois, meager arranged props: shoes, floor lamp, bed or group of seats. The rooms are predominantly populated by grotesque arranged female figures, occupied with seemingly trivial occupations like simply sitting, standing, sleeping, playing a guitar or with a knive, or even riding a centaur like, hermaphrodite creature. The interpretation levels for this work complex are also multilayered. Herreiner's move from Karlsruhe to Berlin as prevailing reference to the topic of housing and habitat may speak from it, as well as the argument, characteristic of Herreiner's work, of mankind, its physiognomy and state of mind.
 
 
Image:
Ilona Harreiner
untitled, 2008
poplar, fabric, paint and plated silver
160 x 80 x 100cm
photo: Achim Kukulies, Düsseldorf
courtesy: Galerie Julia Garnatz

galerie julia garnatz
rolandstraße 83
d 50677 köln
T +49-221-3406297
F +49-221-3406517
Tues - Fri 2 - 6 pm, Sat 12 - 4 pm and by appointment
 
 
 
Galerie Christian Lethert, Cologne
 
 
 Jorinde Voigt, Matrix-Studie 19, 2008
 
 
Jorinde Voigt with Patric Catani and Chris Imler
'Matrix & Lemniscate'


14 Nov 2008 to 21 Dec 2008
 
Galerie Christian Lethert is excited to present Matrix & Lemniscate - a unique collaboration between the artist Jorinde Voigt, and composers Patric Catani and Chris Imler.

The lemniscate is, fundamentally a mechanism for the infinite. A lemniscus or "ribbon" that chases itself in a figure of eight describes the repeated and unending journey of the unbounded. Early Indian thinkers were quick to assert the abstract powers of infinities by recognising that when adding or removing parts to infinity, infinity would always remain. Jorinde Voigt draws structures energised by real and imagined possibilities to investigate finite boundaries of systems. She frames and moderates these investigations with spatiotemporal data, information on speed, volume, and an overlaying of sequences. Her notations embrace the concept that elements of equal value co-exist in a logic and proportion of their own.

It is interesting to note then, that the lemniscate's form derives itself from an ellipse, a figure wherein the sum of its distances to two fixed points is a constant. The French philosopher Descartes, turned these spatial observations into the grounding principles of his Cartesian system of thinking which saw the merging of algebra and geometry. For Voigt, whose earlier drawn notations were reminiscent of equations, her current work has developed to propose a highly inventive form of 'situational geometry', where patterns of cultural behaviour are put into relative position to geographical properties of space. As Cartesian thinking influenced not only mathematics but also the science of map drawing, Voigt's drawings or 'scores,' have left the paper for the Lemniscate project and begun to take place in space and time.

Following Voigt's concepts, composers Patric Catani and Chris Imler, have laid the 'lazy 8' of the infinity motif into the gallery space in the form of an acoustic 'cluster'. The looped composition formed of 16 chapters, snakes around 7 points realised using a multi-channel arrangement of 5 loudspeakers and thus describes the shape of a lemnsicate through pure sound. With their insight into musical forms, Catani and Imler made both field recordings that included the surrounding cityscape of Berlin and also initiated their own sources of sound. These tones and frequencies have then been layered at varying speeds and rhythms to construct a shifting musical 'swarm' (evocative maybe of the flocks of multiple elements in Voigt's drawings). Standing in the centre of this work, the effect is of an architected, geometric form - sensed but not seen, and entirely physical in its scale (the cluster of sound existing between the ground and head height). At the core of the Lemniscate composition is Catani and Imler's structural break up of a tonal construction as the various layers shift and chase themselves around a physical space.

Within this physical space, Voigt's works on paper: Schwarm and Matrix also co-exist alongside the Lemniscate installation. Existing in their own right, the drawings serve to have initiated discussions about principles of collective movement, challenging Catani and Imler with a creative platform through which to develop Lemniscate. The large scale Schwarm series concerns itself with many features of Voigt's previous notations: kisses, detonations, wind speeds, the flight of eagles, but examines how these singular events may take place in a larger course of action. These works deal with the duplication of forms within plural forces such as energy, wind force and collective direction. Dynamic processes are inherent in these notations. Totalling 40 works on paper, Matrix proposes an extended system of the Schwarm series, whereby clustered elements of this large series are isolated and matrixed. It is in these drawings that Voigt gives an intimate treatment to these actions and the notion of the point of view is prevalent.

In answering the classic paradox "what happens if an unstoppable force meets an immovable object?" Isaac Asimov1 hints at both forces transferring their infinite energies into one another. Voigt, Catani and Imler may offer up the alternate question "what happens if the mortal individual is confronted by unending flux?". Matrix & Lemniscate speaks both of our material and animal existence in the face of an ever advancing immaterial world and of the micro and finite condition of the human, in relation to an overall and infinite passing of time.

Andrew Cannon

1 Russian-born American author and professor of biochemistry (1920- 1992)

Lemniscate was created (in part) at Watermill - a laboratory for performance 2008
 
 
 Image:
Jorinde Voigt
"Matrix-Studie 19".
2008
77 x 57 cm
Pencil, Ink on Paper
Unique Piece



Galerie Christian Lethert
Antwerpener Straße 4
D - 50672 Köln
T: +49 - (0)221 - 3560590
F: +49 - (0)221 - 3560554
 
 
 
Marion Scharmann, Cologne
 
 
Sven Weigel, Nymph I, 2006 
 
 
Caroline Bayer
Leylagoor & Ann Guillaume
Katharina Meister
Sven Weigel

till December 19th, 2008

Marion Scharmann's gallery program focuses on international contemporary artists working across media thresholds. Through the interaction of media and its spatial expansion the artists investigate the dynamics of contemporary life and create new visual languages to express the unique features of contemporaneity.
The current exhibition presents Caroline Bayer, Leylagoor & Ann Guillaume, Katharina Meister and Sven Weigel, who show different artistic approaches towards drawing and painting in diverse media like photography, video, paper cuts, wall-, pencil-, wool-, and charcoal-drawings. Thematically the exhibited works deal with spatial concepts portraying urban patterns and landscapes, interior and exterior space. Poetic, transcendental or auratic images meet the ordinary and clear structures.
Caroline Bayer (*1973) from Muenster creates wall drawings with adhesive vinyl tape applied directly onto the wall. She starts out by researching urban structures and then puts her drawings of every-day-architecture into the interior space, juxtaposing inside and outside as well as connecting the real space with the illusionistic space, two- and three-dimensionality.
The Void is of major importance to Caroline Bayer's work, just as to the pieces of the artist duo Leylagoor & Ann Guillaume (*1976/*1980). It is the Void that keeps the two different artistic styles of the French artists at a distance, but links them at the same time. Thus, a mysterious, almost surrealistic new world is created. Leylagoor & Ann Guillaume deconstruct our world to reconstruct it in creation of a new one.
Katharina Meister (*1981) from Karlsruhe composes paper cuts and charcoal drawings on transparent paper, which she also integrates into wooden objects. The objects are placed within the space as to interact with it directly. She often works in layers, putting drawings and paper cuts over each other. An enormous depth is generated, pulling the viewer right into the image. These emotional portraits of landscapes, especially forests, seem to be the setting for a gloomy, mythical fairy tale.
Berlin artist Sven Weigel (*1982) started out as a painter only to neglect this media to now work with photography, video and mixed media. His painterly approach is apparent in all of his work, however, as seen in his work 'Nymph I' and in the piece 'untitled', where wool creates the 'brush strokes'. In his video 'Pan, tilt & roll - Natalia Makarova' he works with found footage, which is set into new contexts. Thus, it is the movements of the shown camera and dancer as well as her speech, that draw lines into space and in her aura of shining light the ballerina seems to be painted and to dissolve.
 
 
Image:
Sven Weigel
Nymph I, 2006
photograph,
24 x 38 cm, framed (39,5 x 53 cm)
unique piece
Courtesy of Marion Scharmann, Cologne

 
 
marion scharmann
schaafenstrasse 10
d-50676 Köln
T +49 221 271629-83
F +49 221 271629-84
tue - fri 1pm - 6pm, sat 12pm - 4pm


 
 
Schnittraum // Lutz Becker, Cologne
 
schnittraum // lutz becker

jülicher str. 14, 50674 cologne
T + 49. (0)221. 290 97 91
F + 49. (0)221. 759 79 40
wed-fri 13-18 h, sat 12-16 h
 
 
 
TEAPOT, Cologne
 
 
Thomas Palme, W.A.L.D. 
 
 
Thomas Palme
 
22 November - 3 January 2009
 
The seismograph in the body of Christ
Thomas Palme, spiritual seismograph, shaman of modern times, exorcises his audience with traditional German healing methods.

Disturbingly, aggressive, sexually. Thomas Palme, the manic creative genius, is not playing, he means it till it bleeds. Alone his formidable productivity (around 4000 drawings in less than a year) is alarming. But even more the content of Palmes images: deformed bodies, crosses, wildly over-painted, the occasional animal or devil. Often complemented with text including short dedications. Images between heaven and hell. No trace of mirth. And yet, sometimes they leave the viewer smiling.

Crosses take a central role in the works. It is obvious that contradictions will be joined together in matromony. A characteristic of his work. Like the melancholy and tragedy that are inherent to these works. The figures presented  appear tortured, mutilated. Physicality for Palme seems to be a threat. Physicality means death. And sex, sin, pain, ostracism, violence. The body, always squirming under this bone crushing burden. Salvation, however, comes solely from the intellectual, the spiritual space.

It becomes interesting when viewer puts the works of Thomas Palme in the context of their formation. In reference to today's world, because in essence, Palmes performances and pencil worlds are a link between today and the afterlife. Between the here and now and the spiritual world of a seer. Materialized recognition from the spirit world. Palme as a bridge builder with the holy zeal - and with discipline of iron.
The artist knows the boundaries between good and evil since his childhood days in the lowlands of the Alps. Palme, the black fishermen. Then and now. A biblical image. And Palme has recognised that the power of evil is today stronger than ever. In many varying forms, it takes possession of real life: as a vomiting teenager in the next game show on MTV, as the unpredictable global financial market crash, or as the tasteful art buyers whose collections are only presented in Swiss customs warehouse. It is always the same demon, whose tool is death.

But Thomas Palme, the seer, recognizes the threat and knows how to confront it. Palme opens his soul and his preaching liturgy of liberation. In word, image and gesture. A contemporary Exorcist, in the guise of a sublime fool. Truly blessed. He understands how the Bavarian priest and hydro-therapist Sebastian Kneipp saw that death lives in the intestines of humans. And so Palme boldly inserts the rectal suppository, the life-giving cure. To cleanse his audience of the corrupting, disease spreading surplus juices.  In order to liberate the world from the evil spirits who have possessed it. To bring people nearer to the essence of being. Every performance, every word and every image of the artist is an expulsion of evil. Palme questions the demons, speaks out The Litany of the Saints and ultimately prohibits the return of the cursed spirits.
Drastic treatment for all viewers. Exhausted, they finally awake from the fog of ignorance, induced by the medication, amid the stinking truth. And it starts, the understanding of the connections in his life: the principle of cause and effect, that everything is related, that everything is in flux and everything returns. Thomas Palme, hallowed be thy enema. Amen.
 
 
Image:
Thomas Palme
W.A.L.D.
Courtesy of TEAPOT, Cologne
 
 
Lutz Göbelsmann
TEAPOT
Bonner Strasse 60
50677 Köln
Deutschland
T +49 221 78940398
M +49 177 5809048

TEAPOT
 
 
 
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BM Box 5163 
London 
WC1N 3XX 
 
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