Galerie Adler Opens Artists Anonymous: "Everything is Possible - Everything is Done"
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, November 22, 2024


Galerie Adler Opens Artists Anonymous: "Everything is Possible - Everything is Done"
Galerie Adler, Artists Anonymous, 2010, Installation view. Photo: Courtesy Galerie Adler.



FRANKFURT.- Anything is possible – but in contemporary art there is actually very rarely anything “new”, anything that really challenges our powers of perception and our mind. We’re talking about works that make us a little dizzy when we contemplate them – a sign that we’re unable to fit what we see into any of the accustomed categories. Like the works of the Berlin artists’ group ARTISTS ANONYMOUS, founded in 2001.

A thought experiment
Assume that we could lay all the pictures ever made on top of one another until this layering of motifs and colours took on, step by step, a uniform shade. The end of colourfulness. Perhaps only black would remain. Everything is done.

Or imagine there being a kind of reset button to delete the inner and outer flood of images. A new beginning. What was left would probably be pure white. The colour that contains all others or, according to Malevich, the “monochrome zero state”. Everything is possible.

Two poles – symbolised by one white and one black square-shaped painting – are the subject of inquiry in the exhibition at Galerie Adler: the complex web of relationships between artistic medium on the one hand and the multifaceted aspects of the colour spectrum on the other.

The two paintings mark the end points out of which everything else develops. The perfect, and hence more or less neutral, square shape, once in pure white and once in light-absorbing black, signals the conceptual approach taken by the group, one that involves in this case a return back to the basics: colour and form. The fact that we are dealing here with painted pictures follows the same line of thought, because ARTISTS ANONYMOUS always begin with painting, the original form of artistic expression.

Viewing the exhibition, the visitor is invited to forget all he has seen before and to embark on a journey into uncharted perceptual territory. Colour is not merely colour – what take its place where it is not visible? Can one “install” colour? What sensations are evoked when not only motifs but also colours appear as “mirror images”?

ARTISTS ANONYMOUS create works that look like photographic negatives, make large-format photographs of painted originals, conjure images that seem like the echo of past pictures, or tackle the theme of “colourlessness” as an installation.

If what is “new” about their art were only a particularly provocative pictorial language or the use of unusual materials, it would not be so difficult to find a category to put it in and we could simply react to it in our practiced fashion – for instance with casual indifference. But we find ourselves unprepared for the strange appeal exerted by the positive-negative pictures, in which we can no longer tell which is the original and which the copy, and whose “reversed” colour schemes prompt us to tirelessly try to define an original state.

Just as disarming is the almost painful beauty of the works. Glowing colours, harmonious forms and elegant patterns – everything exquisitely and tastefully composed, guide our focus the first moment we see these works to their purely aesthetic aspect. And yet while we are looking a kind of metamorphosis occurs and there opens up before our eyes unexpectedly, and hence with all the more impact, the whole complexity of the production process and what is in some cases the radical content of the works.

“It’s about the art and not the artist!” (AA, 2010). That’s why Artists Anonymous usually do not attend their openings and won’t be on hand for this one either. Those who would like to learn more about their art needn’t wait for the rare opportunity to speak with the artists in person, however, but can instead delve into the brand-new catalogue published by Dumont Verlag: Artists Anonymous, The Apocalyptic Warriors, Dumont Buchverlag, 2010, approx. 256 pages with 148 colour illustrations, including a conversation with the artists and Eugen Blume, director of the Hamburger Bahnhof – Museum for Contemporary Art, Berlin, Deutsch/English,
ISBN 978-3-8321-9222-8





Galerie Adler | "Everything is Possible - Everything is Done" | ARTISTS ANONYMOUS |





Today's News

September 4, 2010

Old Masters Picture Gallery in Dresden Explores the Young Johannes Vermeer

Gallery Hyundai Presents Sarah Morris: Clips, Knots, and 1972

A Floating Pavilion for Croatia at the Venice Architecture Biennale

First Millet Exhibition in More Than Twenty-Five Years at Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Culture Minister Opens National Gallery Exhibition Devoted to Dutch 17th-Century Painter Gabriel Metsu

Solo Exhibitions by Don Porcella and Susanne Ring at Cain Schulte Gallery

Bonhams to Sell Elvis Presley's Mercedes-Benz 600 in December

New Works by Berlin Fine Art Photographer Stefan Heyne at Sudendorf Gallery

Adolph Gottlieb Retrospective Opens at the Peggy Guggenheim Collection

Galerie Adler Opens Artists Anonymous: "Everything is Possible - Everything is Done"

Treasures of the Islamic and Indian Worlds at Christie's London

New Book by the Royal Collection Explores the Impact of the Royal Portrait

Arthur Blumenthal Appointed Senior Numismatist at Heritage Auctions

SFMOMA to Honor William T. Wiley with 11th Annual Bay Area Treasure Award

Smithsonian American Art Museum Offers Largest Mission-Based Game Ever Designed

Sotheby's Exhibition of Sculpture at Chatsworth, Now in Its Fifth Year

Ed Ruscha's Apartments, Parking Lots, Palm Trees and Others at Sprüth Magers

Artist Mladen Miljanovic Draws Inspiration from Bosnia's Turmoil

Japanese Fascination with the West is Explored in Exhibition of Prints

Pearl Harbor Marks 65th Anniversary of World War II's End

Galerie Anita Beckers Celebrates 20th Anniversary with Jürgen Klauke Exhibition

Australian Pavilion in Venice Showcases a New Perspective on Cities

Phillips Collection to Reopen on Saturday, Museum Waives Admission Fees

Mexica Ceremonial Censer Replica Handed over to Tlahuac Community

Museum of Modern Art Announces ContemporAsian

Renaissance Seattle Hotel and Seattle Art Museum Celebrate Legacy of Pablo Picasso




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful