Monday 29 April 2019

Michael Wolf, 1954 – 2019

Michael Wolf died 24 April 2019

From an appreciation by Sean O’Hagan:

Michael Wolf, who has died suddenly, aged 64, was perhaps best known for his 2013-14 series, Architecture of Density, in which the facades of Hong Kong’s massive tower blocks, each one housing thousands of people, appear as dramatic geometric abstractions of light and colour… Wolf identified the abiding theme of his work as life in cities and his other signature work, Tokyo Compression, captured the claustrophobic experience of the Japanese capital’s subway system during rush hour. Here the hyperdensity of the postmodern city gives way to a series of portraits of individual endurance, with each face pressed tight against the glass of an ominously overcrowded carriage, offering a Ballardian glimpse of a daily ritual that, in Wolf’s portraits, is by turns intimate and unsettling. (Read full article, here.)

Read obituaries:

Marc Feustel (The Guardian)

Tiffany May (New York Times)


Michael Wolf, Architecture of Density #39
Michael Wolf, Architecture of Density #105
Michael Wolf, Architecture of Density #45
Michael Wolf, Architecture of Density #119
Michael Wolf, Night #20
Michael Wolf, Transparent City #1

Michael Wolf, Transparent City #12
Michael Wolf, Paris Rooftops #8
Michael Wolf, Tokyo Compression #75
Michael Wolf, Tokyo Compression #5
Michael Wolf, Tokyo Compression #18

Saturday 27 April 2019

Stewart Geddes – Andelli Art (until 15 May 2019)

Stewart Geddes, Spitzer
Stewart Geddes is at Andelli Art until 15 May 2019
Artist's statement (from the Andelli website): 
‘I’m interested in the act of painting itself; the way paint behaves and its abundance of different material properties – wetness, transparency, abrupt changes and incremental ones, grittiness and smoothness, quiet moments, shrieking moments, and so on. By focussing on the substance of paint the material is released to communicate directly, so colour can be experienced as colour, and surface as surface and the meanings that can ensue from that.
I’ve recently established an improvised form of painting in which, having decided on a palette, I only partially know what my hand is about to do.
I love this urgent need to make ‘live’ choices as the painting unfolds. It’s a strategized form of risk-taking and an attempt to ‘tap into’ surprising outcomes in an effort to evade caution and break into new territory. Delightfully, the strategy doesn’t usually lead to chaos and incoherence, but when it does, it places me in a position where I care very little, which can be creatively useful.
After this comes a more reflective period, when the painting hangs around in the studio while I wait to come to terms with what I’ve done and move it forward.
I’m currently working with a pictorial language of traversing, meandering lines that run around indeterminate organic-like forms. They establish multiple spatial relations in which forms appear to inhabit deep recessional spaces yet simultaneously assert their place on the painted surface. 
I’m wondering if these are analogous to places of departure and arrival? They certainly have a relation with the semi-conscious workings of my mind.’
Stewart Geddes, Winchell
Stewart Geddes, Pinna
Stewart Geddes, Kombu
Stewart Geddes, Brumwell
Stewart Geddes, Eukary
Stewart Geddes, Sedimichra

Thursday 25 April 2019

Warhol Women – Lévy Gorvy, New York (until 15 June 2019)


Andy Warhol, Blondie, 1981

Warhol Women is at Lévy Gorvy, New York, until 15 June 2019
Andy Warhol, Triple Mona Lisa, 1963
Andy Warhol, Judy (Red), 1978
Andy Warhol, Licorice Marilyn, 1962
Andy Warhol, Mint Marilyn (Turquoise Marilyn), 1962
Andy Warhol, Red Jackie, 1964
Andy Warhol, Ethel Scull, 1963
Andy Warhol, Portrait of Julia Warhola, 1974
Andy Warhol, 40 Jackies, 1964 - installation view
Warhol Women at Lévy Gorvy, installation view

Wednesday 24 April 2019

Reinhard Mucha: Full Take – Sprüth Magers (until 11 May 2019)

Reinhard Mucha, Untitled (SEX), [2019] 1979
Reinhard Mucha: Full Take is at Sprüth Magers, until 11 May 2019.

This was one of the most enjoyably baffling exhibitions I have seen in a while.

From Sprüth Magers’ press release:
If there is a common theme in Düsseldorf-based sculptor and conceptual artist Reinhard Mucha’s work, it is his patient and visually striking exploration of our collective amnesia. Employing a subtle sense of humour, he creates sculptures and installations that seem to retain both time and history, and that the viewer will not forget quickly.

The use of footstools, pedestals, fluorescent lamps and showcases pervades Mucha’s entire oeuvre. They are concrete references to the basic architectural forms of the (museum) exhibition space, while at the same time undermining the institutional authority of the very space whose architecture becomes an integral part of the work. With Mucha, an exhibition is always self-exhibiting; lighting often illuminates only itself. Here it is not just the institution (museum) showing art, it is art showing the institution.

Mucha is often placed in close aesthetic proximity to Joseph Beuys, not least on account of his explicit, often antagonistic references in the naming of his works or his use of felt and found objects from German post-war everyday life. But this parallel is misleading. Mucha’s work has nothing in common with Beuys’s artfully shabby works, nor does it seek to conjure anything. On the contrary. Sensitive and sophisticated, it more closely resembles Minimalism and Conceptual Art and artists such as Blinky Palermo, Donald Judd, Frank Stella and Bruce Nauman. Hardly any other sculptor has so consistently used the zero-point of sculpture after Minimalism as a conceptual stepping stone. Mucha’s sculptures are much more than sculptures; they are melancholic apparatuses that archive history. They are sad machines confronting the largely doomed task of saving the more recent present from oblivion. They are batteries that have absorbed real-life and artistic energies to capacity and now only release them in small amounts. They are discreetly controlled stagings of showing and concealing, of history and anonymity. And last but not least, they are works that enter the world with a unique presence and an unusual resistance.
Read reviews:
Mika Ross-Southall (Hyperallergic)
George Vasey (Art Monthly, No.425, April 2019, p28)
Reinhard Mucha, Oderin / Untitled (MÄNNER FRAUEN), [1987] 1987 / 1981
Reinhard Mucha, "Wind und zu hohe Türme", Für Marcel Breuer, [2019] 1982
Reinhard Mucha, Ahlener Programm / Kleeth, [2019] 2007 / 2019
Reinhard Mucha, Bohmte, 1985
Reinhard Mucha, Hameln, 2014