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Frank Badur, Colour Recall / Im Büro: Silva Reichwein

October 30, 2009 - January 9, 2010

exhibitions of Hamish Morrison Galerie

  • Apr 15 2011 - May 28 2011

    Han Schuil - Paintings / Gemälde

    Hamish Morrison is delighted to present an exhibition of new works by the Dutch painter Han Schuil. This is his first solo show with the gallery, and his first in Berlin.

    Schuil is one of Hollandʼs most important contemporary painters. In 2000, he had a major mid-career retrospective at the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam. In his foreword to the accompanying exhibition catalogue, Rudi Fuchs stated that: “It is curious that details...carry a special weight in the Dutch tradition...It is that compactness and tension...that Schuilʼs paintings also offer.” Like the greatest Dutch paintings, Schuilʼs work aspires to establish what he describes as an “intense simplicity”; something that runs through his countryʼs art history from Van Eyck and Vermeer to contemporary figures such as Rene Daniels.

    Schuil takes fleeting images and everyday motifs – a building, a repair in the road, or, famously, a Batman mask hanging on the door of a WC – and turns them into paintings that demand time and stillness from viewers. They also demand the same things from the artist: as he works slowly, each painting gradually develops its own identity, at some distance from the original image but always inextricably linked to it. He describes this as his workʼs “signaling” effect. He uses everyday forms as a lure, a way to hook viewers on the image. And once he has caught them, a more complex dialogue about painting takes over from the brazenness of his found image. In his words, his works have “the bang of a traffic sign and the intensity of a Flemish primitive”.

    Schuil borrows freely from the histories of abstraction and figuration, drawing no distinction between the two. His recent works encapsulate this approach perfectly. One of the dominant motifs is a cartoon eye. It is a ubiquitous, comforting image that we identify with a range of childish traditions, from Disney to Manga. It is also anonymous; we donʼt know what precise character, if any, Schuil has taken it from. But in his hands, it also becomes all seeing, like the eye that follows us when we walk away from a Vermeer or a Rembrandt. It could also simply be interpreted as an abstract form. The allover pattern that features in several of his new paintings plays a similar game. On the one hand, it could be abstract, but it also evokes broken eggshells, bloodshot eyes, or the cracked glaze of an Old Master painting. And in his “Blast” paintings, he freezes an explosion: a Big Bang at the heart of his work that also brings to mind the cheap advertising signs used in butcherʼs windows or clothing stores to announce the latest special. For German viewers, the explosion is eerily similar to Stern’s logo: an unintended consequence, but one that illustrates the many lives Schuil’s works can have.

    This idea of the crash or explosion carries over into three dimensions in Schuilʼs paintings. He often paints on bent aluminium boxes that push out from the walls and into the gallery space. In using these boxes, Schuil isnʼt critiquing the relationship between the painted surface and its support, or examining the line between painting and sculpture. Rather he sees the boxes, with their dents and imperfections, as integral parts of the images he creates. A car doesnʼt stop being a car once it is dented, even though the carʼs beauty is altered by the impact. Schuilʼs dented surfaces have a similarly transformative effect: they change his images, but they are still images all the same. In another clever transformation, Schuilʼs use of powdery colours often makes the aluminium look like crumpled cardboard, or paper.

    Ultimately, Schuilʼs paintings arenʼt a critique of modernism or abstraction, or even of our contemporary society. Rather, his works are quiet engagements with the history of painting and the role it plays in our lives. He forces us to think about how images function in our fast-paced world, and shows us that painting still has the power to stop us in our tracks.

    Han Schuil was born in Voorschoten, The Netherlands, in 1958. His work has been shown extensively around the world, including at public institutions in Europe, South America and Asia. His work is held in several major institutional and private collections, including AEGON and ABN AMRO, Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam and Museum voor Moderne Kunst, Brussels. He lives and works in Amsterdam.

  • Nov 4 2011 - Mar 17 2011

    Andrey Klassen - Café Raduga / Im Projektraum...

    Hamish Morrison Galerie is very pleased to present Café Raduga, the second solo show by Russian artist Andrey Klassen.

    Andrey Klassen, born in 1984, works almost exclusively with ink on paper, moving between drawing and painting. His colours are endless shades between black and white. The artist’s primary interest is to breathe life into his stories. Apparently effortlessly, he subjects a wide range of different ink techniques to this goal. With great ease, Klassen finds the right shades of grey for his varied scenes, playing virtuosically with different perspectives, submerging his figures and creatures sometimes into darkness, sometimes into a half-shadow, or bathing them in light. Even abstract compositions, following a certain dream logic, are easily integrated into his works.

    The creatures and situations that Klassen creates are drawn from a wide range of sources: mythology, film, literature, fairytales, the everyday, art history, nature, religions, and not least amorous entanglements. He succeeds in representing the variety and confusion of life without interpreting or analysing. His works communicate a tragic but humorous embodiment of the Flaubertian ‘past that plagues us, a present that eludes us, and a future that remains uncertain’.

    The artist himself occasionally appears in his works, sometimes as a small marginal figure looking onto the scene (Puschka-Igruschka) or as a masked hero (Nie wieder allein sein) or as one of his giants who seems to control the situation, or who, having grown too large for his own world, seeks to protect it lovingly (Im ruhigen See).

    The narratives are bound to generally understood signs – signs that, even when reduced to a few lines or dissolved in planes, remain recognisable and identifiable to most. They are, however encoded, characterised by the desire to communicate. In this respect, Klassen’s works are remarkable in two respects. He undertakes the now rather rare attempt to share something with us; the beholder is important to him, he wants to be read. His technique is a means to an end, not an end in itself. At the same time he is well aware of the fact that generally understood signs hardly exist anymore. It is not only cultural and social differences as well as generational codes of signification that determine the legibility of works of art and texts, but also the general and permanent availability of signs and images from various areas and epochs. A tower of Babel of signs and words, a tangle of various levels of knowledge and memory characterises the current art reception.
    Klassen’s ink drawings reflect this chaos and at the same time ignore it. Unperturbed, he tells us his stories (and ours); he seduces us, lures us, and takes us into his encoded, surreal world, where we realise with a mixture of horror and pleasure that what it is about – has always been and will always be – is the same large and small topics of life, and that we will never tire of encountering them in new stories, and take them on, maybe as Batman, a spirit of the woods, or even as ourselves.

    The freedom with which Klassen chooses his sources and motifs achieves its fascinating effect not least through the self-limitation to which he subjects himself in choosing how to proceed. He tells his stories in black and white. Just as when we watch a black-and-white film, we remember the colours by their specific shade of grey, in Klassen’s works we also recognise every colour, every nuance of light by the specific shade of grey that only a particular colour can have. We are aware of the colour without being distracted by it. Just as we are aware, if we allow ourselves to open up to them, of the eternal themes of his poetic and eventful images, without allowing ourselves to be distracted by the labyrinths, which nonetheless enchant us.

    Andrey Klassen was born in 1984 in the Siberian city of Irkutsk. From 2005 to 2010, he was a student at Dresden’s Hochschule für Bildende Künste. Currently he is studying with Ralf Kerbach as master class student. In 2009, he received the German Academic Exchange Service Award for Outstanding Achievements. Despite his youth, he already has held numerous exhibitions in his home country, including a solo show at the Regional Arts Museum of Irkutsk in 2007. His works are already part of notable collections in Europe and the US. This is his second solo show in Berlin. Andrey Klassen lives and works in Dresden.

    A Catalogue will also be published in conjunction with the exhibition.

  • Feb 17 2012 - Mar 24 2012

    Seeing Red

    Billy Apple (USA/NZ) - Frank Badur (DE) - Ronald de Bloeme (NL) - Wernher Bouwens (NL) - Nuria Fuster (ES) - Daan van Golden (NL) - Hermann Glöckner (DE) - Joachim Grommek (DE) - JCJ van der Heyden (NL) - Olaf Holzapfel (DE) - Callum Innes (GB) - Andrey Klassen (RUS) - Yayoi Kusama (JP) - Tad Mike (USA) - Judy Millar (NZ) - Thomas Müller (DE) - Hester Oerlemans (NL) - Ragna Robertsdottir (IS) - Han Schuil (NL) - Ben Sleeuwenhoek (NL)

    Red protects itself. No colour is as territorial as red. It stakes a claim, it is on the alert against the spectrum. (Derek Jarman)

    Seeing Red is Hamish Morrison Galerie’s final exhibition in its rooms in the Heidestrasse. We are delighted to present on this occasion a group exhibition on the theme of the colour red in art.

    From its outset, in addition to working with a stable circle of artists, Hamish Morrison Galerie has always sought to introduce to its audience artists who have rarely, if ever, exhibited in Berlin. For Seeing Red, the gallery has succeeded once again in bringing to Berlin the works of artists such as the important Dutch painters Daan van Golden and JCJ van der Heyden, as well as the pop conceptual artist Billy Apple, whose debut show in 1963 in London coincidentally was entitled Apple Sees Red.

    Red is said to be the first colour to which humans gave a name, the oldest colour designation in the world’s languages. There is even the theory that hundreds of years ago, it may have been the only colour the human eye could perceive. That may have been due to the red colour of blood, or the necessity to distinguish ripe from unripe fruit. However it may be, the colour red was used very early on for cultic purposes, and since time immemorial has had an almost magical effect attributed to it.

    Adam could not resist the red apple, Esau wanted to eat the red meal, Parsifal fought for a red suit of armour. Karen risked her soul for the red shoes, the wolf lusted after the girl with the red riding hood. And it was a red hood on a red raincoat which Donald Sutherland followed in the unforgettable film Don’t Look Now, and which lured him to his horrible bloody death. There are countless stories that could serve as examples for the fatal fascination the colour red can exude.

    For a long time, especially in European culture, wearing red clothes was reserved for the rich and powerful. Whatever powers have been ascribed to the colour red in the cultural history of humanity, its meaning in various cultures has ranged from wealth, happiness, femininity and strength all the way through to grief in some African countries. They are almost exclusively unambiguous and axiomatic positions. Red does not seem to tolerate any objections, neither in a positive nor a negative sense, neither in cold nor in warm temperatures.

    In Christian art of the Middle Ages, red was the colour of martyrdom, of Christ’s sufferings, and thus reserved for the depiction of Biblical scenes, dignitaries of the Church and the aristocracy, but it was also the colour of wickedness and sin. Martyrdom and sin are the two red poles of the world of medieval Europe.

    The newly powerful and wealthy bourgeoisie of the Renaissance was eager to underline its claim to equality with the aristocracy, and was portrayed frequently wearing red clothes.

    With the growing independence of artists from their patrons, the use of colours became more individualized. The use of shades of red initially imitated those shades actually found in the chosen motif. Matisse finally spoke of ‘a colour’s very own beauty that should be preserved, just as in music timbre should be preserved’. He was convinced that ‘colour exists in and of itself’, and elsewhere he said, ‘I’ve used colour to express an emotion’.

    For Kandinsky, form can exist independently, but not colour. ‘Colour cannot be spread boundlessly. We can only imagine or see a boundless red in the mind. … But when red needs to be given a material form (such as in painting), then it must firstly have a particular shade from the endless series of different reds, and secondly be limited by the surface of the painting.’ Kandinsky maintained that the value and character of certain colours are emphasised by certain shapes, and he assigned red to the shape of the square.

    ‘If there were only one truth, we would not keep having to create new images all the time.’ What Picasso says about truth seems to also apply to the effect and role of colour in art as a whole, and thus also to the colour red. Whether we let ourselves be captured by the shades of red in a painting by Frank Badur, inspired by his numerous trips to Asia, or expose ourselves to the intense red on a huge painting by Ronald de Bloeme, whether we ponder the changes red is subjected to as soon as it is confronted with black, as in the large-format paintings by Judy Millar, or engage with the existential roots of the red-and-white Polka Dots by the Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama, the impressions and associations of the colour red remain fascinatingly complex and mysterious.

    The exhibition Seeing Red now invites us to make our own observations. All of the works shown use the colour red. The beholder is here given the rare opportunity to reflect on a colour in art about which so much has been said already, but which nonetheless carefully guards the secret of its fascination. Only one thing can be said with absolute certainty: it doesn’t leave anybody cold.

    Our grateful thanks to the CALDIC Collectie, Wassenaar, for their generous support of the exhibition.

  • May 1 2009 - Sep 13 2009

    DEUCE

  • Mar 12 2010 - Apr 17 2010

    Ragna Róberstdóttir, Mindscape / Im Büro:...

  • Sep 11 2009 - Oct 24 2009

    Ronald de Bloeme, Diktatur / Im Büro: Stefan...

  • Oct 30 2009 - Jan 9 2010

    Frank Badur, Colour Recall / Im Büro: Silva R...

  • Jun 11 2010 - Jul 24 2010

    Erik Niedling, Redox Im Büro: Jörg Sch...

  • Apr 30 2010 - Jun 5 2010

    Judy Millar, A Better Life/ Im Büro: Delphine...