Astrid Klein
03 September - 23 October 2010
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Astrid Klein
Broken Heart, Arbeiten von 1980 - 1995
Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers are delighted to present the first
exhibition by Astrid Klein in their Berlin gallery. The title of the
exhibition Broken Heart, Works 1980-1995 references a body of work from
the year 1980. A selection of works from this series, two sculptures
(1990/1995) and works from the series weiβe Bilder (white paintings),
achieved between 1988 and 1993, will be exhibited.
The painter and sculptor Astrid Klein has been working at integrating
text into her paintings for over three decades. In 1972, before she had
even started her degree in Cologne (1973-77), she began to write several
texts which she later printed onto hand-made paper. The topics of her
own texts, as well as her later use of other textual sources, bear
witness to her thoughts on literary, aesthetic, philosophical and
scientific writings. In a fragmented and concealed way these various
sources are incorporated into her Schriftbilder (text paintings) which
make up the large majority of the exhibited works in Berlin.
The large format works of the 1980 series Broken Heart use excerpts of
text from Arno Schmidt’s seminal work Zettels Traum (1970) in relation
to the representation of women in cinema and photonovels from the 60s
and 70s. The latter were affected by a voyeuristic, masculine
perspective along with this the fetishisation of the female form. In the
collages, Astrid Klein links textual and pictorial material on a visual
level that not necessarily share the same semantic level. This creates a
context, in which new meanings are revealed.
The sculptures BROKEN HEART I and BROKEN HEART II (1990/5) contain
mirrors that have either been shot at or have been smashed with a
hammer. The cracks mean that the reflections of the surroundings can
only be viewed as fragmentary or deformed.
With the weiβe Bilder (1989-1993), which can be seen as the counterpart
to the series schwarze Bilder (black paintings) of the 70s, Astrid Klein
approaches the limits of visibility. To make the invisible visible and
to show what can’t be shown is hinted at in the paradoxical phrase
Erinnerungen eines Gedächtnislosen (memoirs of a person who does not
remember) featured in one if the works on display. The memories fade in
the gradual repetitions of two lines of text, as this is how the almost
unrecognisable text line at the bottom left hand corner can be
interpreted – nicht bis ins Herz getrieben (they do not penetrate the
heart).
Astrid Klein’s paintings, collages, works of photography and
installations created since 1978 question, deconstruct and renew the
relationship between image and text. Since the beginning of the 90s, she
continued these intense discussions also in her large format neon
sculptures and light installations. The form and the typeface of the
text play as important a role in the works as the content. The overlay,
blurring and accentuation can be read as the archeological layers of our
thinking and our perception, of memory and oblivion, of what we
suppress and what is subconscious.
Astrid Klein lives and works in Cologne, she has been awarded numerous
prizes for her works, amongst others the Käthe-Kollwitz-Prize of the
Academy of Arts, Berlin (1997) and the KUNSTKÖLN-PRIZE in 2001 (now the
Cologne Fine Art & Antiques-Prize). Since 1993 the artist has held a
professorship at the Academy of Visual Arts in Leipzig.
Astrid Klein’s works have been displayed in prominent solo exhibitions.
These include L’air de Berlin 2000 Rauminstallation at the Hamburger
Bahnhof, Museum für Gegenwart, Berlin (2002); Auswege II at the Neue
Museum, Staatliches Museum für Kunst und Design, Nürnberg (2001). The
artist’s photographic works were exhibited in 1995 at the Fotomuseum
Winterthur similarly in 1989 in the exhibition Astrid Klein.
Photoarbeiten 1984-1989 in the Kestnergesellschaft, Hannover; the
Institute for Contemorary Art, London; the Wiener Sezession, Vienna and
the Forum Stadtpark, Graz. Important group exhibitions include Zur
Vorstellung des Terrors. Die RAF-Ausstellung, at the KW- Kunst-Werke,
Berlin (2005); Deutschlandbilder, at the Martin-Gropius-Bau, Berlin
(1997); Photographie des 20. Jahrhunderts, at the Museum Ludwig, Köln
(1996); Photography in contemporary German art 1960 to the present, at
the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (1992). Noteworthy is Astrid Klein’s
participation in the Documenta 8 (1987) and the 42nd Biennale in Venice
(1986).
Sprüth Magers Berlin will also be concurrently presenting exhibitions by Barbara Kruger and Ed Ruscha.
For further information and press inquiries please contact Jan Salewski (js@spruethmagers.com).
www.spruethmagers.com |