Neo Rauch "Heilstätten"

David Zwirner 19th Street

poster for Neo Rauch "Heilstätten"

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David Zwirner presents an exhibition of new works by Neo Rauch, on display at the gallery’s 533 West 19th Street space. The exhibition, the artist’s fifth solo show at the gallery, consists of small and large format paintings—several larger-than-life—as well as a bronze sculpture, representing one of the first instances Rauch has worked in three-dimensional form.

Born in 1960 in Leipzig, then East Germany, Rauch is part of a generation of artists who came of age in a war-torn, divided country. While his older East German peers, including Georg Baselitz, Anselm Kiefer, Sigmar Polke, and Gerhard Richter, emigrated to the West during the Cold War, Rauch spent his youth in the Eastern Bloc, and received his arts education at the Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst in Leipzig. The impermeable border within Germany famously tempered the advance of Western avant-garde movements in the East, where figurative painting maintained its predominance. Not until the end of the 1990s did a shift become apparent, and Rauch, then in his late twenties, came to spearhead a break with the existing dogma.

Rauch’s paintings are characterized by a unique combination of realism and surrealist abstraction. In many of his compositions, human figures engaged in manual labor or indeterminable tasks work against backdrops of mundane architecture, industrial settings, or bizarre and often barren landscapes. These figures, though squarely centered in his paintings, often have the appearance of being part of still lifes devoid of a human presence or collaged elements belonging to different time zones. Scale is frequently arbitrary and non-perspectival, which adds to an overall dream-like atmosphere; the spatial relationships construct their own imaginary realm.

In the large-scale painting Aprilnacht (April Night), a man and a woman each hold and inspect an owl or other big bird (in the case of the man, just its head). A fire is lit up between them and its smoke leads up to a cluster of branches suspended in the sky without visible support, as if spelling out a secret message. A pair of gloves in the bottom left corner likewise hovers without support. Holding a painter’s brush, they represent a covert indication of the artist’s presence or, more broadly, of the creative process as such.

Rauch’s bronze sculpture, Falknerin, depicts a life-size model of the female character with the bird on her outstretched arm. As if a personification of the mythological war goddess Athena, who is typically portrayed with an owl, the woman’s aggressive or perhaps supernatural qualities are indicated by several disembodied heads attached to her front. Although three-dimensional, a similar fantastical quality shrouds the sculpture as the woman in the painting. As Daniel Birnbaum, Director of the Moderna Museet, Stockholm, notes of the artist’s oeuvre in general: “Rauch has constructed a signature yet inscrutable cosmos; a weirdly concrete dream of production, athletic strength, and utopian modernity dreamed in a time and a place that no longer exists and yet prevails mysteriously.”

Media

Schedule

from November 04, 2011 to December 17, 2011

Opening Reception on 2011-11-04 from 18:00 to 20:00

Artist(s)

Neo Rauch

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