Kerstin Brätsch opens exhibition at Rome's Fondazione Memmo
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, February 15, 2025


Kerstin Brätsch opens exhibition at Rome's Fondazione Memmo
KAYA (Kerstin Brätsch and Debo Eilers), work in progress, 2018, © Daniele Molajoli.



ROME.- Fondazione Memmo presents: Kerstin Brätsch_Ruine / KAYA_KOVO in the Scuderie at Palazzo Ruspoli. The exhibition curated by Francesco Stocchi is open to the public from 4 May to 11 November 2018.

As suggested by the split title, the exhibition consists of two distinct parts: the Casa and the Stalla. In the Casa, the main gallery space, _Ruine showcases the artist’s solo practice. _KOVO occupies the smaller Stalla space and is comprised of offerings by KAYA – the sustained collaborative project of Brätsch and artist Debo Eilers.

Titled with the German word Ruine – ruin in English, rovina in Italian – this exhibition continues Brätsch’s longstanding interest in destabilizing and expanding the language of painting. One tactic of this methodology involves ongoing collaborations with artisans to interrogate and provoke the notions of subjectivity historically ascribed to the figure of the Painter.

A new group of marbling paintings [Psychopompo] from the ongoing series Unstable Talismanic Rendering, made with German master marbler Dirk Lange, is being shown alongside new stuccomarmo works, created in collaboration with the Roman artisan Walter Cipriani.

Seen together, the installation suggests an ancient site – a ruin – caught between decay and reconstruction, a liminal and visionary place of transitions.

To create Brätsch’s marbling paintings, inks and solvents are dripped onto a liquid surface to create a pattern, which is then pulled from the surface with a sheet of paper. The work is the result of a collaboration involving four hands – the two of the artist and two of the artisan – but also employs and necessitates the universal forces of gravity, repulsion, and adhesion.

Non-human elements work with and against the artist’s choices, obscuring the instincts of subjective decisions. Each marbling on view in _Ruine functions as a talisman, a macro-projection of micro-initiatives onto the mechanics of the unknown.

Brätsch’s other new body of work on view is made using stucco, a form of plaster originally brought from Bavaria since XVII century, in order to imitate marble and other rare stones.

The material unifies and extends the logic of matter established in two previous series: the artist’s antique glassworks, which contain slices of agate stones, and the marblings, which imitate miasmic geological phenomena.

Brätsch’s imitation stone–slabs appear as the very physical objects upon which they are modelled (stone mimicry). This time inversion – or future past – suits the interconnected cosmos of Brätsch’s investigations into how painting’s subjectivity is composite and non-linear.

The production of the stuccos, however, is in stark opposition to the marblings’ defining actions of dropping, chance and watery flow; it is instead a resistant, sculptural process, in which hand-modeling does the work of fluid brush marks. The stucco, therefore, could be read as a materialized, flattened marbling drop.

The artist’s signature figures here as subtext: nicknamed Brätschwurst (after a German Bratwurst sausage) the distortion and materialization of her name provides a clue towards her manipulations of material - creating “sausage” shapes, which are then pressed into flat layers. Titled Fossil Psychic, the stuccos’ bright colors induce prescient monsters, fragments from past and future series; they break apart into bones, body parts, and ritualistic amulets - even as they resist erosion and exist stone-like, as paintings trapped within petrological time. As works, they comprise the “wurst–case” scenario, the wounded but magical emergence of energy from the least of living materials, speaking an alphabet of pre–verbal gestures, a language encrusted below the surface.

KOVO - covo in Italian, cave in English - is also a term for a hybrid man-cow. This hybridity sets the tone for Brätsch and Eilers’s working process: KAYA's paintings are semi-human, conjuring the specters of animism and science fiction. In the darkness of the cave, under the glow of the lamps, KAYA celebrates a rite of evocation. Yet KAYA's paintings flee their humanity, refusing their determining destiny: they overflow into savagery, the realm of animality, where ritual and transgression are at home.

For _KOVO, Brätsch and Eilers are joined by Naples-based sound artist and musician Nicolas An Xedro, who is currently investigating preverbal states of consciousness and matter in its simultaneous stages of composition / decomposition.










Today's News

June 7, 2018

McNay Art Museum presents Immersed: Local to Global Art Sensations

Dia reveals multi-year upgrade and expansion plan, plus relaunch of Dia:Soho

Archives of American Art announces major promised gift from the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation

Exhibition features over 20 rare vintage black and white prints by Sandra Weiner

World Monuments Fund and Google launch online platform for threatened Iraqi heritage

Gagosian exhibits three large papier-mâché sculptures by Franz West

Gauguin: Voyage to Tahiti stars Vincent Cassel as the famed French artist

Exhibition explores the relationship between studio photography and music in Burkina Faso

Tomma Abts opens her first solo exhibition in a UK public institution

Exhibition explores the photographer/printer collaboration

New book on Suriname completes Rijksmuseum's Country Series

Hollis Taggart Galleries opens exhibition of works by Andrew Balkin

Albertinum opens largest exhibition of Slavs and Tatars collective's works in Germany to date

Pavilion of The Republic of Kosovo presents the house as a substitute for the city

Kerstin Brätsch opens exhibition at Rome's Fondazione Memmo

The Brooklyn Museum opens a site-specific activation by Rob Wynne

Koopman Rare Art announces works to be offered at Masterpiece London

Philadelphia Collection achieves 'white-glove' sale at Freeman's

Lyons Wier Gallery opens exhibition of works by Mark Zimmermann

First Northwest overview of work by R.B. Kitaj opens in Portland

Alison Brooks Architects unveils a major immersive installation 'ReCasting' in Venice

Major exhibition of work by Santiago Calatrava debuts in Prague

Solo exhibition of painter Mouteea Murad opens at Ayyam Gallery Beirut

Excavation: Peter Blum Gallery opens a group exhibition




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
(52 8110667640)

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