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Isa Genzken - ISSIE ENERGIE

KÖNIG GALERIE
Nov 10th – Dec 9th 2017
Berlin, Alexandrinenstraße 118-121Map & Full Hours
, 'Untitled,' 2017, KÖNIG GALERIE

Isa Genzken

Untitled, 2017

KÖNIG GALERIE

Contact Gallery
, 'Untitled,' 2017, KÖNIG GALERIE

Isa Genzken

Untitled, 2017

KÖNIG GALERIE

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Contact Gallery

Press Release

ISA GENZKEN | ISSIE ENERGIE

  1. NOVEMBER 2017 – 7. JANUARY 2018
    ST. AGNES | NAVE
    OPENING: 10. NOVEMBER, 6 - 9 PM
    “Every form is the arrested momentary image of a process. Thus, the work is a station
    on the road to becoming and not the set goal.” El Lissitzky
    “I’ve always said that you should be able to express something with every sculpture,
    that it should be a sculpture even if it’s not finished yet. That’s what a sculpture should
    look like. It has to have some kind of relationship to reality.” Isa Genzken
    100 years after 1917
    Isa Genzken is one of the most influential figures in contemporary art. Her iconographic
    use of everyday materials elicits a shift in the perspective of the viewer and frees the
    industrially produced materials she works with from their original meaning. Her eccentric
    imagination ignores the established laws of composition, oversteps the boundaries of
    sculpture and again and again pushes us to the limits of what we can take in. Isa
    Genzken’s transmuted constructions lure visitors out of their comfortable viewing habits
    and confront them with the immanent question of the abandonment of the self.
    Schauspieler
    The Schauspieler (actors) form a complex group of works. In a lecture at the
    Städelschule in Frankfurt, Benjamin Buchloh gives them a special place in Isa Genzken’s
    oeuvre, stating that they confront us with “the most disturbing encounters with ourselves
    as subjects of advanced forms of consumerism”. The figures first appear as astronauts
    floating through space in the artist’s installation OIL, presented in the German pavilion
    of the Venice Biennale in 2007. Since then, an increasing number of mannequins – the ones
    usually found in shop windows – populate her sculptural constructions.
    Figures of men, women and children stand, sit and lie in different stages of dress and
    undress, their faces partially or fully covered by masks, netting, glasses and spray
    paint, almost always sporting headwear, sometimes tied up in banderols or tape, turned
    away from or towards each other, alone, in pairs or in small groups, like in a painting,
    on a stage or in a film set in space.
    Isa Genzken uses the term Schauspieler to describe these groups of figures that at first
    glance resemble sculptural scenes. Genzken’s remark that she sometimes also calls them
    “my puppets” gives these snapshots an intimate character and adds the theme of selfportrayal
    to the more universal aspects. In contrast to the English word “actor”, which
    describes the plot-driven activity of a player, the German title “Schauspieler” alludes
    to the freedom to act, where – in compliance with the direction – suspense and delight
    are allowed as much space as the awareness of otherness.
    In a conversation with Wolfgang Tillmans about sculpture in general, Isa Genzken
    said: “They have to have some kind of relationship to reality. It can’t be something
    meditative or even made up, totally bland and beside the point (...) actually, sculptures
    are like photographs – they can be crazy, but they still have to have some quality that
    links them to reality.”
    Apparently chosen at random and appropriated with perfect indifference, the mannequins
    and their clothing meet the basic criteria of the readymade. Not without a sense of
    humour, Isa Genzken transforms artificial bodies into artistic bodies by freeing the
    artificial body – designed to be easily recognised at first glance – from its rigid
    structure. She also counters its immediate recognisability – and the thrill of the moment
    – with a trance-like staging of emotionally coloured inner worlds that leads to longer
    periods of contemplation.
    ST. AGNES
    ALEXANDRINENSTR. 118–121
    D-10969 BERLIN
    T +49.30.261 030 80
    F +49.30.261 030 811
    INFO@KOENIGGALERIE.COM
    OPENING HOURS
    TUE–Sat 11AM– 7PM
    Sun 12pm –7pm
    KOENIGGALERIE.COM
    Wall installations
    In her new wall pieces Isa Genzken again combines the radical nature of the readymade
    aesthetic that is characteristic of her work as a whole with earlier moments of the
    complex history of art in the 20th century. She continues to blend modernist art with
    anti-modernist art in her work. And in the unbounded chaos of the present she again finds
    allies opposing the sentimental pessimism from the time of the First World War.
    Isa Genzken’s use of shopbought tape references Piet Mondrian and the “new design
    ideas” of the Dutch De Stijl movement that he founded in 1917, but also Theo van Doesburg,
    who in his „concrete“ works was committed to geometric and abstract reduction of lines
    and surfaces in pursuit of a functional purism.
    “I created them without intention, without any intention except to reject ideas.”
    Marcel Duchamp
    In her new works, Genzken combines constant grid-like presentation of the motif with
    the dynamic effect of diagonal lines, lending her collages a radical indifference
    through her use of industrially produced materials, as is typical for the readymade,
    whose key work „The Fountain“ by Marcel Duchamp was conceived in the same year that the
    De Stijl movement was founded. Her new wall installations challenge the viewer with a
    material reality that seeks to do nothing but to represent in a tangible yet immaterial
    way an attitude toward life she creates through her work, which faces today‘s turmoils
    without sentiment.
    Concrete works
    Concrete – that amorphous grey substance devoid of identity – is the primary building
    material of contemporary construction. Isa Genzken has been using reinforced concrete in
    her work since the 1980s, both for indoor and outdoor sculptures. She casts forms out of
    it and leaves them bare after they’ve hardened, without making the slightest change to
    them. Sometimes she adds an antenna or surrounds them with barrier tape.
    Their construction and realisation is always preceded by the artist’s imagination.
    That is the decisive moment of the work, flowing into the finished sculpture through the
    initial design and the physical and chemical casting process.
    The outdoor sculpture ABC – a double gate made of reinforced concrete presented at
    Skulptur Projekte Münster in 1987 – follows the architectural aesthetics of El Lissitzky
    and breaks up the form of a library building with a sheer and elegant shell construction.
    Despite their aura of monumentality, Isa Genzken’s indoor concrete sculptures also
    have a certain delicacy that makes them appear fragile. Her flights of stairs – which the
    artist calls “Leonardo” – look like the model of an unrealised building project, but in
    fact they are sculptures in their own right, countering unfinishedness and deterioration
    with the robust durable nature of their material. The work sparks our imagination because
    it reminds us of a large-scale architectural element freed from spatial tradition by
    being undersized, which in turn reveals its dynamic inner nature.
    Here too Isa Genzken challenges our established habits of perception; she transforms
    an everyday material through an artistic and alchemical process and in its amorphous
    state instils the cast concrete with such transparency that it leads the viewer to their
    own inner world.
    “If you ask me what art is, I don’t know. If you don’t ask me, I do know.” El Lissitzky
    Text: Ulrich Höfler, 2017
    In collaboration with Galerie Buchholz

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