BERLIN.- KÖNIG GALERIE is presenting a solo exhibition by the German-British artist Michael Müller. Under the title "Fragments of Time", Müller deepens his painterly exploration of the ancient Greek myth of the Dioscuri, which he began in 2022 with the room-filling painting installation "Der Geschenkte Tag" at Frankfurts Städel Museum. "Fragments of Time" is his first exhibition with the gallery and coincides with a large-scale installation at the Neues Museum on Berlins Museum Island.
According to the Dioscuri myth, the unequal twins Castor and Polydeuces sons of Leda, who were conceived in a single night by different fathers, one by the god Zeus, the other by the mortal Tyndareus grew up as brothers of the beautiful Helen. Known as the Dioscuri, they were chronicled variously as Argonauts, heroes, legendary boxers and horse tamers, victors and fallen warriors, lovers, wanderers between worlds, and finally, constellations in the night sky. The brothers, one mortal and the other immortal, choose, out of love for one another, to share a single fate: After the mortal Castor fell in battle, the immortal Polydeuces asked his father Zeus to strip him of his immortality. Touched by the brothers love, Zeus gifts them the opportunity henceforth to live together, alternating daily between Olympus, the realm of the gods, and Hades, the land of the dead, forever lingering on the uncertain threshold of life and death being born and dying anew each day.
For "Fragments of Time", Müller revisits this myth from a new perspective. Using abstract painting, his works capture "fragments" of this narrative, with allusion to specific events and situations from the lives of the Dioscuri, while still drawing on personal connections and questioning his own role vis-à-vis this intricate constellation.
Müller translates the mythical world of this narrative into a visible reality in varying degrees of transparency, as in the diaphanous surfaces of "Das Gemälde als Objekt " (2025) and "LPHY (Am Kreuz)" (2022/23), through to the more opaque, melancholic canvases of the black on black "Der erschöpfte Sigmar Polke" (2025). Between fiery red-orange visions of Hades and cloud-white depictions of Olympus ("Aides-Olymp Schwebebahn GmbH", 2022), Müller visualizes the Dioscuris daily traversal of these worlds; the paintings embodying this torn apart state, arranged into unequal parts, as in "Sturz in einen anderen Raum, zur gleichen Zeit" (2021/22). Layers of visibility and invisibility reflect the complex relationships between the works: motifs from one painting reappear in another, some digitally altered and reprinted onto canvas, as in the diptych "Ein Werk, drei Bilder" (2022/24). These repurposed fragments then serve as foundations for further painterly elaborations, where gestures conceal some elements while revealing others. "In painting, I search for what cannot be seen," Müller explains. "An artist discovers what is initially invisible. Painting is about making that visible."
The souls dwelling in the underworld, the shadows of the deceased, haunt the darker works in "Fragments of Time", while the supreme power of the Olympian gods calls into question the artists authority over his own paintings. Ultimately, what in a work of art exists in perpetuity, and what is subject to the vagaries of time and decay? And what happens when one belongs to neither world or to both at once like the boundary-crossing Castor and Polydeuces? How does the meaning of ancient myths shift when they are reinterpreted in the present, transformed from the universal to the personal? What does the painter see in his own works, and what do the viewers perceive in turn? In Müllers words, "The gaze is not an objective, mechanical measurement. The eye moves, curiosity constantly shifts its focus. Sometimes the lens is clouded, sometimes clear. A thought places a filter upon it. A feeling, like a speck of dust, irritates the gaze." Is the glowing orange behind the darkest clouds in "Die Sehnsucht des unbestechlichen Fährmanns" (2025) a foreboding of the torments of hell, or the hopeful shimmer of the Olympian gods?
Müller unfolds, in dark colors, a multi-layered and allusive reflection on the meaning of time, mortality, and timeless love, continually weighing the possibilities and limits of abstraction while posing the crucial question: Can an abstract artwork tell a story?
Text by Gero Heschl