NEW YORK, NY.- Petzel Gallery announces the sixth solo-exhibitionhis first at their Upper East Side locationof New York-based artist Dirk Skreber.
May 1st, 1986: a brand new amusement park featuring a Ferris wheel and bumper cars is set to open in Pripyat, a town in the northern Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, close to Chernobyl. It never does. Five days prior, the core of Chernobyls nuclear reactor erupts. Despite contamination, the amusement park opens for a few hours on April 27thto distract panicked residents. The city is evacuated and to this day the abandoned amusement park sits in the 30km perimeter known as the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone.
Anticipated by Andrei Tarkovskys movie Stalker (1979) the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone has come to epitomize isolation in which time is an incomprehensible void.
Deserted wastelands resonate with Skreber, who grew up in a town on the East German border where death strips and no mans lands, bearing WWII relics, became the legal and illegal exploratory ground for the teenager.
In his new, mostly oil paint on aluminum honeycomb works, Skreber draws a line from his youthful expeditions through to Pripyats deserted territory and the cinematic depictions of Tarkovsky, directly to contemporary painting. Simultaneously Skreber nods to the long history of artistic representations of urban decay that confront societys faith in human perseverance.
The honeycomb material with its exposed edges is congruent with dislocation, or the sharp contraposition of familiar with unknown, pleasure with discomfiture, days after with days before and vice versa. The observer is lured by vibrant colors evoking radiation-saturated perceived terrains, into which everything and everyone involved is plunged.
Dirk Skreber (born 1961, Germany) lives and works in New York.