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Friday, August 15, 2025 |
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Light and legacy: Lenbachhaus re-exhibits Dan Flavin's iconic Kunstbau installation |
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Dan Flavin, Untitled (For Ksenija), 1994, Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus und Kunstbau München / Lenbachhaus Munich, Schenkung von Heiner und Philippa Friedrich im Andenken an ihre Eltern Erika und Harald Friedrich und Dominique und John de Menil / Donated by Heiner and Philippa Friedrich in memory of their parents Erika and Harald Friedrich and Dominique and John de Menil © Estate of Dan Flavin / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2018. Foto / Photo: Simone Gänsheimer, Lenbachhaus.
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MUNICH.- In 1994, the Kunstbau of Lenbachhaus Munich was inaugurated. Designed by the architectural firm Uwe Kiessler + Partner, the subterranean exhibition hallmirroring the dimensions of the subway station directly beneath itprovided the Lenbachhaus with a new spatial dimension for presenting art.
To mark the opening, Dan Flavin (19331996) created one of his final "situations". Flavin used this term to describe site-specific works in which the focus lies on spatial light and perception.
No work is more closely associated with the Kunstbau than Untitled (For Ksenija). This late piece reaffirms Flavin's ongoing engagement with the interplay between light art and architecture. By illuminating the exhibition space, he transforms it into a realm of experience. Electric light, color, space, and the bodies and senses of the visitors enter into an inseparable, diffused interaction.
As a leading figure in Minimal Arta movement that incorporated industrially manufactured materials and radically reduced personal expressionFlavin deliberately distanced himself from the illusionistic imagery of painting, the gestural expression of Abstract Expressionism, and the figurative language of Pop Art. His works consistently respond to their spatial environments, making viewer perception and the relationship to space integral parts of the work.
After early explorations in painting, Flavin began working exclusively with standardized, commercially available fluorescent tubes in the mid-1960s, using them in varied arrangements as his primary artistic medium. His minimalist pencil drawings served as precise conceptual foundations for these installations.
On March 8, 1994, the Lenbachhaus received a fax from the Dan Flavin Studio in New York containing one such minimalist drawing. The sketch outlines both the conceptual framework and specific technical instructions for installing the fluorescent lamps on the Kunstbau's lighting track, documenting the artistic conception of the piece. Flavin developed these drawings into operable structures, enabling each realization to function as a distinct, site-specific model.
Installed along the Kunstbau's four architecturally defined lighting tracks, the colored fluorescent lamps recede physically in favor of an experiential space defined entirely by light. This light not only brings the architecture to life but also profoundly to perception of visitors: movement, light adaptation, and color perception become elements of an aesthetic experience that encourages reflection on space, the body, and perception itself.
Heiner and Philippa Friedrich donated Untitled (For Ksenija) to the Lenbachhaus in memory of their parents Erika and Harald Friedrich, as well as Dominique and John de Menil. The installation is a permanent part of the collection and is now being shown for the tenth time in accordance with the donors' wishes.
Further information about the work and its exhibition history can be found in the rotunda of the Kunstbau.
Following the presentation of Dan Flavins light installation Untitled (For Ksenija), a collaborative project featuring sound pieces by students from Florian Hecker's "Sound and Experiment" program (Bavarian Excellence Professorship Program Academy of Fine Arts, Munich) creates a new sensory environment at Kunstbau from December 2 to 7, 2025.
Curated by Johannes Michael Stanislaus
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