KUNSTLICHT/Artificial Lighting
September 7, 2006- October 7, 2006
Reception: September 7, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
529 W 20th St
Sara Tecchia Roma New York is proud to present an exhibition of new work by
Matthias Köster,
Markus Lueder and
Klaus Wanker.
MATTHIAS KÖSTER uses oil on metal to pay homage to Belle du jour, Fellini,
La grande Bouffe. Marcello Mastroianni and Catherine Deneuve make frequent
appearances. He states, "Film series and film stills interest me as
painterly strategies, allowing the picture itself to become a source of
light. But never using white as light, never painting white into the
picture. Cineatic space becomes a site of painting." This manifests itself
in not only the image, but in the style of his craft. "Over the past three
years I've been working on aluminium. Oil on aluminium requires you to work
quickly, and that suits me perfectly. All my pictures are painted "prima,"
which means they're painted in one go."
MARC LUEDERS combines painting and photography to create a complex interplay
between reality and illusion. In his Figure series, Lueders takes
photographs of construction sites, abandoned parking lots, and occasional
pastoral landscapes. He paints human figures directly into the scenes,
copied from photographs of people that are furtively lifted from crowded
city life - street corners, crosswalks and sidewalks. The new context is
believable, but slightly off. The subject seems to wonder, "Where am I? What
am I doing here?" Lueders goes even further, morphing the figures into pure
gesture, painterly strokes. They feel equally valid and all the more
disturbing.
KLAUS WANKER takes this street wear fashion world into his painterly focus.
Fashion is perfection for the moment. It is the promise of uniqueness, of
affiliation. You can't abscond from fashion, especially when you're young.
In the centre of the fashion world stand the models filling it with life,
only few of them as famous as the clothes they wear. Marketing and music
have developed codes manipulating teenagers' formation of identity. In his
painted transference, Wanker inserts background with designs typical for
exchangeable spaces such as club rooms, metro stations or music videos. He
reduces the backgrounds to rudimentary geometrical forms presenting the
"star" as placed in front of a light box backdrop. His choice of the frames,
the emphasis on the faces closely related to the close-ups often applied in
advertising photography stands in the same context.
These three German-speaking artists all take cues from media - sublimating,
transforming the artificial into something new. We get to watch.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | map | | Gallery | Sara Tecchia Roma New York | | Address | 529 W 20th St, 2nd Fl New York (Chelsea) NY, 10011 United States | | Phone | 212-741-2900 | | Fax | 212-741-3181 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 10-6 | |
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