PARIS.- In the context of global protest movements, notably Black Lives Matter, Marc Brandenburgs exhibition Snowflake addresses political and relational issues such as gender and ethnic differences, while embracing the urgent need for a radical change. Through his most recent series of drawings, he explores the conditions of life at the fringes of society.
The topics Im dealing with now, Ive been dealing with for the last 30 years. It might seem like the zeitgeist but shit has just been going backwards for way too long. Thats all. Enough! Marc Brandenburg
The German and Afro-American artist has devoted himself to precisely those conditions that are increasingly becoming the object of hate and ridicule in our society, especially in the context of the events of recent months: the sensitive, the endangered, the traumatised, the lack of resistance, and the idea that every person is unique, regardless of their social status, gender or ethnic background.
Scenes from a protest march are presented alongside smaller images of faceless figures masked, with heads bowed or fully covered. They are severed from their surroundings and appear cocooned or in free-fall amidst an expanse of undefined space. Marc Brandenburgs figures and shapes reveal the fragility and potential homelessness of the human condition, which resonate particularly in the period of the health, social and economic global crises we are facing today.
With an oeuvre that encompasses drawing, photography, performance and installation, Marc Brandenburg's unique pencil drawings and his innovative modes of immersive display form a distinctive and acclaimed element of his practice. Inverting light and dark values, the resulting images radically expand the possibilities of drawing and function as springboards into strange parallel world(s), reduced to their fundamentals and freed from explicit social or political narrative.
Born in 1965 in Berlin, where he now lives and works, Marc Brandenburg grew up in Texas and Germany. Self-taught, he draws from a range of sources, including film, literature, urban cultures of the mid-twentieth century, activism and social segregation to consider themes of nonconformity, performance, difference and isolation. Taking long walks through the cities of Berlin and Barcelona, the artist photographs the people, groups and scenes he encounters, which he then isolates from their surroundings and develops inverted, transposing black for white, before completing his pencil reproductions with meticulous attention to detail and form.
Marc Brandenburgs negative-reversed black-and-white drawings thematise the vision of a broken, violent society in which people are increasingly socially isolated, suffering mental illness and addiction. Oliver Koerner von Gustorf (writer & journalist), 2020
Through images of roles and bodies, of costumes and rituals, of elements outside the social norm, the artist explores a sense of transience and temporality. Depicting drug users, street performers and improvised shakedowns (or acts of bribery and extortion) as isolated and suspended moments, Brandenburgs drawings freeze otherwise fleeting scenes in a state of permanence. Referencing Chuck Palahniuks 1996 novel Fight Club in the exhibition's title, Snowflake evokes the topics he addresses the white of the paper, the idea of drawing as crystallisation and the act of arresting time and is embodied in the practices of representation and display that inform the exhibition. It alludes to the words use in increasingly divided societies as a metaphorical insult, employed by and aimed at varying political, social and generational groups since it was first coined by Palahniuk over 50 years ago.
Coalescing the motif of the snowflake with his subject matter, the artist invites visitors to consider the experience of homelessness, understood both literally and as the absence of self or the loss of control a mythic homelessness. As with the development of the term snowflake its descriptive function and ever-changing social construct Brandenburgs figures are presented not as individual identities, but as signifiers of socially constructed groupings. Lacking backgrounds, features or facial expressions, they become objects awaiting imposed identities and narratives. Their anonymous status as empty signifiers calls into question broader considerations of both embedded stereotyping and its inherent subjectivity.
Only the form, the surface remains, at once material and psychological, often stretched or distorted
Marc Brandenburgs pictures subtly examine the ways in which bodies move in urban public space, posing questions about power, class and territory
in their poetic radicality, these pictures are embedded in a long subversive tradition
They insistently embody that very sensibility which causes every snowflake-hater to cringe. Oliver Koerner von Gustorf, 2020
Marc Brandenburg (b. 1965) lives and works in Berlin. With a practice that traverses drawing, photography, performance, film and installation, he first came to prominence during the 1990s with his distinctive graphite drawings. Working from his own photographs, Brandenburg isolates figures or fragments of his surroundings public demonstrations, football fans, fairgrounds and portraits of friends or relatives and delicately transfers them into graphite through a process of reversal akin to photographic negatives. Presented under black light, the finished pieces take on an unsettlingly threatening effect. The artist has exhibited internationally and has works represented in collections worldwide, including The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Deutsche Bank, Kupferstichkabinett, Berlin; Hamburger Kunsthalle; Studio Museum in Harlem, New York; Kupferstich-Kabinett, Dresden; Städtische Galerie Wolfsburg; and Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt. In 2019, he was selected for the Unlimited section of Art Basel, Switzerland, curated by Gianni Jetzer, with his series Camouflage Pullovers. Recent solo exhibitions include Kunstraum Potsdam (2018); Kunsthaus Stade (2015), Städtische Galerie Wolfsburg (2012); Hamburger Kunsthalle (2011); and Denver Art Museum (2010).