Archive for the ‘focus’ Category

(Deutsch) MALER-GENIE Neo Rauch verdient Geld mit realem Sozialismus

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

Es ist die große Siegerehrung: Zu seinem 50. Geburtstag würdigen Ausstellungen in Leipzig und München das Gesamtwerk des Malers Neo Rauch. Für seine Bilder werden inzwischen Millionen gezahlt. Was manchen immer noch verwundern mag, schließlich bedient sich Rauch einer gewisse Sozialismus-Ästhetik.

Vielleicht sollte man einmal die Frage stellen, wo Neo Rauchs Bilder eigentlich herkommen? Es ist nämlich nicht so, dass die Leinwände in Depots in Leipzig eingelagert wären. Rauchs Bilder findet man in Miami, Los Angeles – und sogar auf Hawaii.

Man weiß nicht, was Sammler in solch sonnenverwöhnten Badeparadiesen an Rauchs verschatteten ostdeutschen Landschaften interessiert. Offensichtlich ist jedoch, dass der Aufstieg des Leipzigers zum „Malerstar“ kein ausschließlich einheimisches Phänomen ist.

Rauch hat seit knapp zehn Jahren die Unterstützung einflussreicher amerikanischer Sammler, er ist dort als einer der wenigen deutschen Maler seiner Generation durchgesetzt und auch wenn seit jüngster Zeit ehemals wohlwollende US-Kritiker wie Jerry Saltz vom „New York Magazine“ leise Zweifel an der dauerhaften Wirkung seiner Kunst anmelden, ist ihm zumindest eine Zeit lang der sichere Sitz im Kunstkanon garantiert.

Jetzt wird Neo Rauch 50 Jahre alt. Und feiert mit seinen Bildern: Der erste Teil seiner Doppelretrospektive eröffnet an seinem Geburtstag im Museum der bildenden Künste in Leipzig, Teil zwei dann am Montagabend in der Pinakothek der Moderne in München.

120 Werke werden gezeigt – eine Art große Siegerehrung. Ganz leicht kann es für die Kuratoren nicht gewesen sein. Das Œuvre lässt sich zwar ohne größeres Blutvergießen zwischen zwei Museen aufteilen, das zeigt aber auch schon, dass es für eine Rauch-Retrospektive keine einfache Blaupause gibt. Jedes Bild kann, keines muss dabei sein. Rauch hat keine „Demoiselles d’Avignon“ wie Picasso, keinen Stammheim-Zyklus wie Richter.

Er selbst könne auch nicht das eine entscheidende Bild in seinem Gesamtwerk identifizieren, sagt der Künstler, der stets auf hohem, aber gleichmäßigem Niveau gemalt hat. Und so wird der Besuch der Doppelretrospektive weniger ein schnelles Abschreiten der Highlights und eher ein langsames Abgleiten in das Universum des Künstlers, in dem verschiedene Figuren und Themen unablässig durch die Bilder kreiseln, die Werke miteinander reden und allmählich gemeinsame Erzählungen anstimmen, von Erschöpfungszuständen, gesellschaftlichem Auseinanderdriften, den magischen Kräften der Natur, jähen Gewaltausbrüchen, den Schwierigkeiten der Malerei und auch immer wieder von der Gemeinheit der Kunstkritiker.

Ein wenig ähnelt eine Ausstellung von Neo Rauch einem aufgeschlagenen Bilderbuch. Man kann sich leicht an den Szenen festlesen, jede einzelne seiner rätselhaften Kompositionen mit ihrer Vielzahl von Referenzen kann unendlich lange ausinterpretiert werden und ist am Ende doch nicht erklärbar. Gut möglich, dass es irgendwann bei Kunsthistorikern das eigene Fachgebiet der Rauch-Exegese gibt.

Die zwei Teile der Retrospektive versuchen auf unterschiedlichen Pfaden an das Rauchsche Werk heranzuführen. In München gruppiert Kurator Bernhart Schwenk die Gemälde nach formalen Ähnlichkeiten. Am Beginn stehen drei Bilder, die vorwiegend mit tonalen Abstufungen einer einzigen Farbe gemalt wurden: „Das Blaue“ von 2006 sowie zwei neue Werke, die erst in diesem Jahr fertiggestellt wurden: das rote „Übertage“ und das gelbe „Kalimuna“. Letzteres zeigt Menschen auf einer Straße vor zwei Ladengeschäften, in denen Kalisalz und Munition angeboten werden. Im Hintergrund ist ein Bergwerk zu sehen.

Wie so oft hat das Bild auch mit Rauchs Biografie zu tun: Seine Großmutter, bei der er aufwuchs, arbeitete im Krieg in einer Munitionsfabrik. Gleichzeitig demonstriert das Werk den eigentümlichen trockenen Humor, den der Leipziger in seinen Arbeiten gelegentlich durchschimmern lässt. In dieser doch eher altertümlich wirkenden Szene wird auf einem Verkauftresen neben Patronen und Salzkristallen auch ein Gegenstand angeboten, der entfernt an ein Handy oder ein iBook erinnert.

Nach dem „bunten Rauch“ im ersten Raum kann man in München noch der „braunen Rauch“ sehen, in dessen Bildern dunkle Töne dominieren und sich abstrakte Farbschlieren in die figurativen Szenen hineinfeuchten wie Stocknässe. Das sind vermutlich die typischsten Rauch-Bilder, fast schon Klischees ihrer selbst.

Weitere Räume demonstrieren, wie Rauch seit den 90er Jahren die Entwicklung der Malereigeschichte noch einmal in umgekehrter Reihenfolge vollzogen hat. Am Anfang seiner Karriere stehen flächige Bildträger mit stark grafischen Kompositionen und Protagonisten, die durch ihre Anleihen bei Comics und sozialistischen Werbeplakaten auch immer ein wenig an verblichene Pappfiguren erinnern.

Kurz nach dem Jahr 2000 entdeckt der Künstler dann die Raumtiefe und konstruiert seither verschachtelte, fast schon altmeisterlich gemalte Bühnenräume, auf denen sehr lebendig wirkendes Darstellerpersonal absonderliche Stücke aufführt.

THEMATISCHE ASSOZIATIONEN ZWISCHEN DEN BILDERN

Während man in München die Werke aus einem kunstwissenschaftlicheren Blickwinkel zu betrachten scheint, setzt man in Leipzig deutlicher auf thematische Assoziationen zwischen den Bildern. Es gibt Bildgruppen zu Situationen mit Arbeitern und zwei Räume, in denen besonders fantastische Bilder hängen: alptraumhafte Szenerien, in denen monströse Schlangen unerwartet aus dem Schilfland auftauchen, Fliegen sich in Menschen verwandeln und dämonische Gestalten mit Widderköpfen aus Büchern predigen.

Dann stößt man überraschend auf zwei kleine Selbstporträts, die belegen, dass der ernste Maler auch einen Sinn für Humor hat. Einmal Rauch als Rockabilly mit umgeschnallter Gitarre und einmal Rauch, der nach lästigen Motten schlägt – so wie King-Kong auf der Spitze des Empire State Buildings nach den Flugzeugen.

Die beiden Ausstellungen zeigen schön, wie vielseitig Rauch in der Variation seiner Malerei ist. Andererseits verdrängt man durch den Verzicht auf eine chronologische Anordnung, dass der Maler kein wirkliches Frühwerk besitzt. Mit der Wende, da war er 29, warf Rauch sein malerisches Konzept vollständig um, verzichtete fortan auf alle subjektive Expressivität, die in der DDR noch als subversiv gelten konnte und wandte sich dem zu, was im Westen damals als Tabu galt: In der Malerei mit Figuren Geschichten zu erzählen.

Der zeitliche Zusammenklang hat nun dazu geführt, dass Rauchs neue Malerei so alt ist wie das wiedervereinte Deutschland. Mit 50 scheint Rauch nun in der Lage zu sein, jeden seiner Träume oder Alpträume auf die Leinwand bringen zu können. Da er spät zu seinem Stil gefunden hat, ist nicht mehr zu erwarten, dass er seine Malerei noch einmal grundlegend verändert. Er wird sie weiter verfeinern. Und wenn sich irgendwann wieder eine größere Bandbreite an Emotionen in die Bilder schleicht und den allgegenwärtigen Nebel der Melancholie vertreibt, dann werden seine Bilder nicht nur beeindruckend und bedrückend sein, sondern auch mitreißend.

VON TIM ACKERMANN

Artition: Member interview with Moses Foster

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

Moses Foster is an artist with complex abilities. His use of colour is very elaborate and he has a certain ’swing’ in his pieces, creating great patterns, as well as figures and shapes. I guess some of his works with white background look great in real. Read more in my interview with him:

Artition:
How would you describe your work/art/style?

MF:
I´ve been asked this question quite often… at bars, gallery openings, occassional interests from people who meet me on the street…. I´ve come to a conclusion… I don´t worry about the style… I just create and continue creating from the source which is my daily life.

Artition:
What or who inspires you?

MF:
Touch and go…. that´s the type of question this is….
Inspiration for me is also very personal. I´ve been painting since I was 5 years old… long before I beheld the massive paintings of Caravaggio and Reubens in various international museums. Light and shadow inspires me…. How do I portray light and shadow without giving away too much. The subject matter varies….color in my opinion are like piano keys…and I´m still the 5 year old… Playing with the fire of construction in the face of all the hot heads of the university whom I sum up as Nay sayers….

Rebellion inspires me… The fight to get it down on canvas in which ever medium suits the subject.

Artition:
Is there a message you want to communicate with your art?

MF:
Lately my work is moving at such a rate until I´m not so sure how to answer this question. I try to title the single pieces but sometimes I´m stuck with the mental connection I have with the works… I don´t want to trap my ideas with names or zealous titles anymore… I´ve had enough of trying to communicate on terms of public awareness. I´m making the work…. I´ll let it do the job of communicating with whom it desires. I say this because most times… I get the feeling that when people check out a painting…. they either want more than what´s physically there…or they´re projecting their own fantasies… All fine by me… but I think the only people who really understand the language of babies are mothers. It´s not until the child is at a certain age that it´s able to reach out and take account of its own existence. Translate that to painting and other creative functions !!


Artition:
How do you like artition and what would you like to be added or changed?

MF:
I woke up this morning and found this interview in my inbox….
I like that. I´ve been so busy and wanted to put it to the side…but I decided.. it´s for my future that I sit here and answer these questions as best I can…

Artition:
Who would you like to change life with for one day?


MF:
I would never consider this.


Artition:
Who is your favourite artist?

MF:
Nature

Visit Moses’ profile on artition

Visit Moses’ website

Acne’s Summer Details

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Acne from Sweden is proving hard this time that they are able to produce some great fashion not only by their collaboration with Lanvin earlier last year.

Setting the first tone for coming season Acne shows an indigo called ‘Kex Armour’ with knee protectors in a great robot – style. Definitely a big step forward! The whole collection is worth looking here.

Military Fall Down – Léo Caillard

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Let me introduce a great photographer from Paris: Monsieur  Léo Caillard

His most recent project is showing US military vehicles such as tanks, fighters or submarines that are invading Paris.

Leo Caillard / New Artwork : ” War Games “

Photography and 3D / Diasec 48×72 inches / Limited edition of 6.

Leo Caillard
Phone: +33 (0)6 83 82 33 86

Exhibition recommendation: Otto Dix in New York

Monday, March 29th, 2010

OTTO DIX

March 11-August 30, 2010

This spring, Neue Galerie New York presents “Otto Dix,” the first solo museum exhibition of works by this major German artist ever held in North America. Organized by Olaf Peters, Professor of Modern Art History and Art Theory at the Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg, the show will open at the Neue Galerie, then travel to the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts.

More than almost any other German painter, Otto Dix (1891-1969) and his works have profoundly influenced the popular notion of the Weimar Republic. His paintings were among the most graphic visual representatives of  that period, exposing with unsparing and wicked wit the instability and contradictions of the time.

The exhibition includes more than 100 masterpieces by Otto Dix, and addresses four themes. The first is Dix’s traumatic experiences as a soldier in World War I. The second is portraiture, a genre at which the artist excelled. The third is sexuality, a key theme in the Dix oeuvre. The fourth is religious and allegorical painting. The show includes the work that Dix is best know for—paintings from the so-called “golden Weimar years”—but to contextualize them, it also includes Dix’s work from the early 1920s, as well as his later work, produced as veiled protest against the Third Reich.

Artition: Member interview with Vladimir Hristov

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

Vladimir Hristov joint us recently and instantly caught our attention with his provocative works, that are in the same way so harmoniously and illustrative. The compositions, the colors and his attempt to create abstract atmosphere will define him as an expressionist, such as Macke or Chagall; but by modern influences in beauty as well as bloodiness he defines himself as a contemporary expressionist, absorbing our daily nature into an aesthetic matter.

Artition:
How would you describe your work/art/style?

VH:
Mix of traditional methods with contemporary and modern way of painting. On a contrary of being afraid of heaving different styles in one painting, I love having all those diametrically contrasted genres mixed up in one piece. What really matters is which emotion and/or which visual impression the work evokes in the viewers minds.

Artition:
What or who inspires you?

VH:
Mix of: Botticelli and Kandinsky with Nick Cave & Sonic Youth, that might be about where I want to go…
Starting with Byzantine and Renaissance art, going forward through: Klimt & Schiele, Oskar Kokoschka and Chagall, plus Russian Avantgarde & Pop Art altogether with music & PoP Culture. There are many sources from where I feed my inspiration.

Artition:
Is there a message you want to communicate with your art?

VH:
Sex & religion… death, love, hope, fear, serial killers & guns, gods and angels… are, among others, the objectives that I am fascinated with. My paintings are not made in representational manner. Instead of putting up one image that represents this or that specific matter I prefer to play with the uncertainty of the forms and the transformations of one shape into another, and the free associations that they might bring up. I try to put all this together in a way that whenever the viewer pays some attention to the painting, he/she will always have some new feelings and new things to discover.
I intent to leave the painting “open” enough for ones perception and translation of its message.

Artition:
How do you like artition and what would you like to be added or changed?

VH:
Since I am new member of artition I am still discovering what this site is offering and until now I am delighted with it’s content.

Artition:
Who would you like to change life with for one day?

VH:
Well this is the far most difficult question to answer… first thing that comes to my mind is to have the chance of being The Art Agent of some most successful artist today and discover the art of Hristov, or just being Silvio Berlusconi for a day and have all the fun…

Artition:
Who is your favourite artist?

VH:
I am hugely impressed with Christian Boltanski lately, I love his work.

Visit Vladimir’s profile on Artition

Visit Vladimir’s homepage

Artists to watch at: Duvier del Dago

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

DUVIER DEL DAGO

*1976 Villa Clara, Cuba, lives and works in Havanna

His installations are certainly an eye catcher. He works only with cords and light, creating 3-Dimensional objects, such as planes, bikes or persons. It seems you look at a 3-D computer design but its in real size and in front of you. Turning off the lights would cause the artwork to erase completely, making it a very transparent and exciting style of work.

Price: 15 000 to 30 000 US-Dollar

Artition: Interview with Maria Jose Aguilar

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

I am more than delighted to post an interview with a very great artist on Artition. Maria Jose Aguilar is extremely talented in classical painting. Classical in every sense, as she paints in a style threatened with extinction that she calls symbolic realism. Her works are so impulsive and as they attempt to be so “out of time” they really reflect a complete attendance in our recent world, giving an insight of the life from spanish women covered in beauty and absolutism. Her methods are so traditional, the composures of the bodies, the places, the objects and the light create unique experience of art in a contemporary manner. Read more on what she has to say about it:

Artition:
How would you describe your work/art/style?

MJA: My works, both creative and technical process is elaborated and reflective. Pictures do not usually result by improvisation, even those that only purpose is to gain attention. The way I try mentally to process and manage the feelings and emotions that I perceive is to take the items carefully for each composition. They act as key elements of an internal language in the play, symbols belonging to a close, everyday reality, which will help decipher the message contained in each work, a message that attempts to go beyond the aesthetic contemplation. Hence the term symbolic realism.

Artition:
What or who inspires you?

MJA: Life, its intensity, with all that entails pain and joy. Sometimes the object
anodyne premonition makes me stop and enclosing a story worth telling.

Artition:

Is there a message you want to communicate with your art?

MJA: The creation of a work has a meaning for me always. It is a reflective dialogue with myself about everything that touches my heart. It is not always the same conversation, although on the same page. The viewer, from his own, perceive and recreate the table getting his own message, but if it was provided with the keys you placed in the context that inspired a painting, you qualify to be introduced, if desired, in the world the artist, perhaps giving a broader understanding of the painting.

Artition:
How do you like artition and what would you like to be added or changed?

MJA: Artition seems to me a wonderful opportunity to raise awareness of artistic diversity. I do not feel qualified to say what should be added or changed.

Artition:
Who would you like to change life with for one day?

MJA: In a world where events unfold at breakneck speed in its events that often prevents us from having a space to think, feel, dream, etc.., Would the message of my work they supposed an invitation to reflection.

Artition:
Who is your favourite artist?

MJA: Their are numerous artists that I admire. Some of them:

Spanish Artists: Velázquez, Murillo, Zurbarán, Valdés Leal, Madrazo, Goya, Sorolla, Picasso, Zóbel …

Other: Tiziano, Leonardo Da Vinci, Miguel Ángel, Rafael, Rubens, Rembrandt, Vermeer, Durero, Ingres, Van Gogh, Degas, Tolouse Lautrec, …

Visit Maria’s profile on Artition

Artition: Interview with Patricia Shin

Monday, February 1st, 2010

I am delighted to post an interview with the great Artist Patricia Shin. Her way of drawing lines and circles is very sophisticated. She is great in creating patterns in black and white and most of her works really create a 3-dimensional sphere. Read more to understand her works better:

Artition 
How would you describe your work/art/style?


PS: My artwork is mainly music based. I was trained to be a musician from my early childhood, and I later discovered that I could use my musical intuition in my paintings. I try to translate the music into visual images based on the rhythm of the music I hear.

Artition: 
What or who inspires you?


PS: I am inspired by people who pursue their passions and are driven to accomplish their goals in life. I believe that this world is filled with uninspired people who are full of lost potential. It is those who have a passion for something that truly make this world beautiful. 

Artition: 
Is there a message you want to communicate with your art? 

PS: I want to communicate that music is not only something you can hear, but something that you can feel and is visually pleasing.

Artition: 
How do you like artition and what would you like to be added or changed?


PS: I think artition as a concept is a great idea. I would like to be able to replace flash with html5 on the site. 

Artition: 
Who would you like to change life with for one day?


PS: My 2-year-old nephew. It would be fascinating to see the world in the eyes of a child. 

Artition: 
Who is your favourite artist?


PS: Liubov Popova

Visit Patricia’s profile on Artition

Visit Patricia’s website

Artition: Interview with Shaun Gribouski

Monday, January 25th, 2010

Starting off this week with Shaun Gribouski and his interview with Artition.

Shaun seems to be fascinated by humans and urban lifestyle in our modern society. He draws with charcoal and pastel and paints with acrylic in a fascinating way. Creating shadow and light is one of his greatest talents and certainly his brand-mark in the works.

Artition: 
How would you describe your work/art/style?

SG: I view my art as a cross between expressionism and realism, created by fusing passion with technical calculation. My work usually focuses on people or some aspect of human society because I believe that they are the most powerful and interesting subjects. Humanity, from its beauty to its brutality, is one thing that any viewer will relate to.

Artition: 
What or who inspires you?

SG: My greatest artistic inspiration is Hip-Hop music. The best Hip-Hop is to me the epitome of that fusion of emotion with the technical. Aside from that, humanity is my inspiration. I draw inspiration from vast and varied sources, some of which directly translate into my art, while others fuel the emotion that drives me to create. A quick list of a few of these many diverse sources: strong and beautiful women, the AK-47, Rio de Janeiro, the legacy of slavery, the Boston Celtics. As you can see, there is little overt connection between all of these things.

Artition: 
Is there a message you want to communicate with your art?

SG: It can be debilitating to art when the artist focuses too much on the message because it often sacrifices quality in an attempt to say something specific. I might have some idea in mind as I’m making art, but my energy is directed at the process of creation. If a message comes through, so be it, but people can take whatever they want from it. All I hope to communicate is the passion that went into making it, because there is an interconnectedness of all people, regardless of nationality, ethnicity, religion, or any of the other lines we divide ourselves along. I’m not saying that in a “peace on earth”-type way, just that raw feelings are pretty much the same. Anger is anger and joy is joy, regardless of how disparate the triggers of such feelings are.

Artition: 
How do you like artition and what would you like to be added or changed?

SG: I like that it is designed in an attractive and unpretentious manner and that it is user-friendly. It is excellent as is and at the present time, I don’t see anything that warrants change.

Artition: 
Who would you like to change life with for one day?

SG: It sounds a bit cliché, but I’ve never wanted to be anyone else.

Artition: 
Who is your favourite artist?

SG: My favorite artist is Nasir Jones. He is not a visual artist, but I’ve never felt more moved and inspired by anyone else’s work than I have by his. Nas excels in every aspect of his art. He has every unteachable quality that an artist could ever want. For me personally, his album Illmatic is the single greatest piece of art ever made.

Visit Shaun Gribouski’s profile on Artition