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  18 June 2009

Sculpture & Installation

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Grusenmeyer Art Gallery, Deurle, Belgium
Galerie Christian Lethert, Cologne
Galerie Chantal Crousel, Paris
Kingsgate Gallery, London
Contemporary Art Centre, Vilnius, Lithuania
 
 
Grusenmeyer Art Gallery, Deurle, Belgium
 
 
Alexej Meschtschanow, Dämonen benutzen geschlossene Türen 2008 
 
 
Dé/Montage

Recent works by artists from Berlin
Susanne Kutter, Alexej Meschtschanow, Regine Müller-Waldeck, Christoph Steinmeyer

curated by Barbara J. Scheuermann

June 21 - September 13 (closed July 15 - August 5)
 
Berlin is still one of the most attracting cities for artists of our time. This is not only due to the legendary low rents and living costs (which are not so low anymore anyway) but also because of Berlin's unique history in the last century and its thus unique "energy" which is noticeable for everyone visiting the city's galleries, artist studios, and, probably even more, its bars and clubs and parks.
 
Even if one does not believe in "trends", one cannot deny that there are particular trends or rather themes and issues which are at certain times more relevant than they are at others. Among those at the moment there currently seems to be a strong tendency to use everyday objects and settings in a certain manner: by mounting, dismounting and combining familiar items such as furniture, clothing or household articles artists create disturbingly unsettling images, sculptures and scenarios. Their alienating quality sometime remind of the surrealistic practice of assembling and mounting the most diverse objects, yet artists like Susanne Kutter, Alexej Meschtschanow, Regine Müller-Waldeck and Christoph Steinmeyer use these techniques not mainly to find methods of working with the unconscious but rather in order to examine - in clearly conscious and very diverse ways - a wide range of artistic and existential questions. "Dé/Montage" aims to follow these artists on their exploration of these questions in bringing together a curated selection of recent paintings, sculptures, installations and videos from Berlin.
 
Susanne Kutter
's Flooded Home (2003) functions as a starting point of this parcours of unsettling pieces of art. A living room is slowly being filled up with water until all furniture and plants and decorative objects start to float. What is supposed to be the stable center of a settled home turns out to be as unsettling as one can imagine. Something similar, yet in a very different way, shows Panic Room (2008): a castle, noble and proud, is taken over by mice who, over a period of several weeks, eat up the building (which is a small model made of bread) until it becomes a true ruin and finally collapes.
 
Floating colours and collapsing forms can also be found in Christoph Steinmeyer's splendid paintings. It is not only the beguiling game of blurring colours and demounting objects that is striking in them, but also the way in which the artist juxtaposes different art historical references without revealing the concrete source. Film is important for Steinmeyer, as well as old masters' paintings and - almost inevitable - the art and thinking of the Surrealists. Paintings like Baby Jane (2006) or Kiss (2007) combine all these interests to intriguing visions of space and time - and their dissolving.
 
Rather obscure iron elements at the wall of the hallway lead into the next room and suggest a different, albeit notional, level of perception. Specially for this exhibition Alexej Meschtschanow and Regine Müller-Waldeck, together with the curator, arranged their sculptures for a collective room installation. Both artists' works deal particularly with notions of the unconscious and the uncanny.
 
Already famous are Meschtschanow's awkward chairs of which one can be found in front of the office. His Dämonen benutzen geschlossene Türen (Demons use closed doors, 2008) is a playful, yet disturbing arrangement of tilted doors, hold (or moved) by weird legs resp. posts. The latter also appear in Rudolf Lutz in einem dadaistisch beklebten Frauenkostüm (Rudolf Lutz dressed in a dadaistically pasted woman's costume, 2009), there holding or rather pressing a framed photograph of Bauhaus teacher Rudolf Lutz, dressed in an eccentric costume sporting an exalted pose, to the wall.
 
Regine Müller-Waldeck's Ich glaube, es ist überwunden, sie zeigt Interesse an ihrer Umgebung (I think it's overcome, she is showing interest in what's around her, 2008) builds a strong counterbalance in the room. The black blanket, stuck to a metal board on the wall, could refer to a dark curtain or to bedspread, its colour refers, particularly in conjunction with the title, to sickness and death. Many of Müller-Waldeck's sculptures work with matters of emotion and memories, using fragments of the known and the familiar, and disarranging them. At the same time repellent and appealing, these artworks, as much as the works by the other artists in this show, make one thing very clear: Nothing is certain. Therefore everything can - and should - be de/mounted.
 
Barbara J. Scheuermann
works as independent curator and writer in Berlin. In her curatorial work and her writings she mainly focuses on video and installation, questions of narrativity, performativity and gender as well as on art from the Middle East. Her doctoral thesis (2005) analyses narrative structures in contemporary artworks using as example works by William Kentridge and Tracey Emin. Before she moved to Berlin in November 2008, she worked as a curator of contemporary art at Tate Modern, London. Previously, she worked at Haus der Kunst, Munich, and K21 Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen. As independent writer and art critic she contributes to Kunstzeitung, Informationsdienst Kunst, <H>art, Kölner Stadtanzeiger, Intro et al. as well as to several exhibition catalogues and other publications.
 

Image:
Alexej Meschtschanow
Dämonen benutzen geschlossene Türen 2008
Courtesy of the artist and Klemm's, Berlin
 
 
GRUSENMEYER ART GALLERY
Museumlaan 16
9831 Deurle
Gent
Belgium
+32 (0) 9 282 77 93


 
 
 
Galerie Christian Lethert, Cologne
 
 
Gereon Krebber 
 
 
Gereon Krebber: Let the pigs pay

20 June - 25 July 2009
 
We are pleased to be welcoming sculptor Gereon Krebber for a second solo exhibition in our gallery space. Gereon Krebber (who was born in 1973 and lives and works in Cologne) is showing new works with the intriguingly name of "Let the Pigs Pay".

See for yourself how the artist treats the pigs this time: The front room is hung with mobiles that turn agilely in the air. These consist of dried pigs' feet and ears that appear to be floating in space. The artist has given them a gold patina, hung them on poles, and counterbalanced them with concrete weights. The ensemble seems bizarre and ludicrous: Dark, slightly threatening, and surprisingly vivid, the finely-balanced poles bump into each other, the ears riveted with eyelets, the balance maintained with angler lead. The bodiless pigs rotate in the airspace of the gallery between strange revolution trophies and kabobs of doggy treats.

The other rooms of the gallery also exude a world's end atmosphere. It smells like something has been burning here: Jutting into the one room is an all-but-collapsed and charred sculptural ruins of what perhaps used to be part of a hut or a stall. Holes have burned through the planks, and a shopping cart converted into a feed trough has been fastened to the wall - and now holds fingerlike pigtails.

The viewer who has not yet had enough now stumbles into the back room, having passed over a greenish bowl containing entrails - luckily, these are made of acrylic resin. Arriving at the gallerist's desk, it is now also possible to pay, since here is where Gereon Krebber is presenting his new catalogue "Sorrysorrysosorry" , hot off the press for the exhibition, edited by the Museum Goch and published by Kerber Verlag in Bielefeld. 120 pages in length, the book shows Krebber's works from over the past two years in diverse solo exhibitions such as the Kunsthaus Essen, the Kunstverein Leverkusen, the Pawnshop Gallery in Los Angeles, and in group exhibitions such as the Lustwarande 08 in the Dutch city of Tilburg. The catalogue received generous support from the Kunststiftung NRW.


Image:
Gereon Krebber
Courtesy of Galerie Christian Lethert


Galerie Christian Lethert
Antwerpener Straße 4
D-50672 Cologne
Germany
+49 (0)221 35 60 590


 
 
 
Galerie Chantal Crousel, Paris
 
 
Jean-Luc Moulène, Monument pour Sainte Anne Projet, 2008
 
 
Jean-Luc Moulène
Ce que j'ai - What I have

May 30 - September 5, 2009
 
What do you do ?
What do you have ?
Who are you ?
 
Here is how the world exists.

A circumstantial fact bound to humours in the sense of wellbeing and weather forecast. The refusal to let oneself be qualified.

The Galerie Chantal Crousel is pleased to announce the fourth individual exhibition of Jean-Luc Moulène.

The recent works brought together here - seven sculptures, two photographs, one video, six drawings - are punctuated by five older works in a way to remind us of the infinite combinations of the mind in time and in space, the statement and the form being constantly put to the test to different points of view:

Bordel d'organes - Monument pour Sainte Anne - Digest Sound - Troué - Divisé - Headbox - Chute d'escalier - Tilleuls - Spider Gilles - Noeud - (Pierre percée) percée - Punk Ashram - (Pierre percée) percée - Soleil Noir - Dim. - Môme aux yeux fond de teint - Os non os - Standard -Mort et vif - Le Noeud Coulant - Régulier - Paysage

This exhibition constitutes not only the continuity of the three previous ones, but also of the large exhibition recently organized by the Carré d'art, Nîmes (January 28 - May 3, 2009).


Image:
Jean-Luc Moulène
Monument pour Sainte Anne Projet. 2008
Bois, papiers divers, béton, plâtre et fond de teint
40 x 36 x 20 cm
© ADAGP
Photo credit: Florian Kleinefenn


GALERIE CHANTAL CROUSEL
10 rue Charlot
75003 Paris
France
+33 1 42 77 38 87


 
 
 
Kingsgate Gallery, London
 
 
Simon Rattigan, Falling through angles at Kingsgate Gallery, London
 
 
Falling through angles

Simon Rattigan

19th June - 28th June 2009
Thursday to Sundays only: 12 - 6pm

Kingsgate Gallery presents 'Falling through angles', an exhibition by Simon Rattigan..

The practice of Simon Rattigan draws together objects and images to investigate the overlooked, unnoticed and mundane events of daily life. He is an artist fascinated by objects, their classifications, transformations and dispersal throughout our social exchanges. He delves into the ambiguous connection of histories; repeatedly deciphering its fragmented material whilst engaging a sense of irony concerning the actions and coincidences that form our narratives.

For this exhibition at Kingsgate Gallery the artist has brought together a collection of works which expand on a contrived relationship between a photographic document and a torn seat cover. They are a record of a precise moment an event occurred and both allude to their own historical connotations and relative sequence of events. The photograph, taken by Alfred Stiegltiz in 1914, documents the first exhibition of African art in his New York gallery. This was described as the first time African objects were framed as art and not ethnographic specimens. After the opening of the exhibition Edward Steichen re-organized the exhibition adding paper backings to animate the space and objects, this new spatial arrangement was to add a modernist dynamic to the overall image.

The objects in this exhibition have formed their connections over the period of their collection and transformation. The spatial arrangements follow idiosyncratic systems of display to question codes and conventions of exhibition production; they are expressions of and reactions to collective experience and private reflection.

Simon Rattigan lives and works in London.


Image: © Simon Rattigan


Kingsgate Gallery
Kingsgate Workshops Trust
110 - 116 Kingsgate Road
London NW6 2JG
+44 (0)207 328 7878
 
 
 
Contemporary Art Centre, Vilnius, Lithuania
 
 
Paramodel. Paramodelic - Graffiti. 2008 (installation view) 
 
 
 
Big in Japan

June 19 - August 16, 2009
Participating artists: Yayoi Kusama, Paramodel, Hiraki Sawa, Go Watanabe
Curated by: Renata Dubinskaite and Kestutis Kuizinas

Opening: Friday 19 June at 6 pm

Film screening: Saturday 20 June at 9 pm
Yoji Yamada's feature "Kinema no tenchi" ("Final Take: The Golden Days of Movies", 117 min., 1986, English subtitles) in the CAC Cinema Hall. The screening is supported by the Embassy of Japan in Lithuania.

On Saturday 20 June, as part of the "Vilnius - European Capital of Culture 2009" project "Let There Be Night!" the exhibition "Big in Japan" will be open until 10 pm. Free Admission

The Contemporary Art Centre is proud to launch the first major exhibition of Japanese contemporary art presented in Lithuania. Big in Japan continues the CAC's dynamic Vilnius culture capital year program - showcasing the latest developments in contemporary art from around the world.

The curators of Big in Japan have imagined the exhibition as a set of four discrete solo-projects; affording the artists to produce large-scale installations that the audience can truly immerse themselves inside. Each exhibition space is made over as a distinctive artistic world or dream space and is reflective of the powerful visuality present in contemporary Japanese culture and art.

Yayoi Kusama has been producing all encompassing environments since the 1960s and at the CAC presents an installation that couples one of her classic mirror chambers with her recurring allover polka dot motif "Dots Obsession - Infinity Mirrored Room" (2008). The dots that recur in her work are a visualisation of an illness that Kusama (who is now in her eighties) has suffered from since childhood that occludes her vision in a field of spots. While her work is emblematic of this sad affliction her use of colour, and inflatable sculptures, that retain a naive and playful quality, makes her work a joy to experience.

Paramodel, an artist duo from Osaka, has transformed the upstairs transition spaces of the CAC into a 360 degree fantastical toy railroad - with plastic tracks, and painted decorations, running up the walls and across the ceiling in what looks like garden of tendrils. The work, titled "Paramodelic - Graffiti" (2009), takes its allover and dispersed properties from graffiti's aesthetics. The organic sprouting of the tracks makes the space into what seems to be an artificial hothouse environment; or a wonderful toyshop from children's fiction. Of course, references to artificial nature, mass transit, and trains, are also imbued with more critical meanings that the audience can reflect upon.

London-based artist Hiraki Sawa, in his synched six-screen video installation "Hako" (2007), slowly merges images of one of Japan's nuclear power plants, a forest preserved by Shinto monks, bizarrely churning sea, and multiple landscapes and interiors.. Each of these images balances on the blurry line between the natural and artificial, and the real and surreal. Meanwhile, the exact local time is ticking away on a dollhouse clock set against a white wallpaper background in still-frame, which makes the scenes seem like interior visions, and dreamlike, rather than views of the world.

Go Watanabe has created six new light box mounted android portraits (No. 26-31) from his "Face ('Portrait')" (2005-2009) series especially for Big in Japan. Watanabe's stunning alien faces appear to be staring directly at the viewer, although it is clear that they are not sentient beings and do not possess the power of sight. The beautiful albinos in the images might look identical at first glance, yet there are subtle differences between them; each portrait is constructed from a different image of a face and shares that referents skin, facial structure, and hair growth. Paradoxically, the uniqueness of human skin becomes apparent when several portraits appear in proximity and lends a lifelike appearance to these artificial images.

Big in Japan is accompanied by a catalogue, which features texts by the exhibition's curators and artists, and full colour photography of the artists' works.


Image:
Paramodel. Paramodelic - Graffiti. 2008 (installation view)
Courtesy the artists and Mori Yu Gallery (Tokyo)
 

CAC - Contemporary Art Centre
Vokieciu 2
LT - 01130
Vilnius
Lithuania
+3705 212 1954


 
 
 
 
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