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Sunday, December 7, 2025 |
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| New exhibition explores shifting artistic languages from the 1960s to today |
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Dan Walsh playfully unfolds seriality and its subtle variations, constructing internal rhythms only to subvert them.
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BERLIN.- Galerie Thomas Schulte is presenting Rotation, a group exhibition featuring eight artists from its program, whose worksspanning from the late 1960s to todayhighlight the dynamic exchange of artistic positions within the gallery. Across varied media and approaches, Richard Deacon, Lena Henke, Franka Hörnschemeyer, Matt Mullican, Leunora Salihu, Fred Sandback, Dan Walsh, and Jonas Weichsel explore the interplay of form and system as structuring principles in their artistic practice.
Rotation brings together a shifting constellation of voices within the gallerys history. Here, form and system unfold as mutable conditionsrevisited, reconfigured, and reimagined. The exhibition traces an ongoing movement between generations and artistic languages, where each position turns toward another in a continual state of renewal.
Engaging with paradoxical situations rather than established notions of form, Richard Deacon selects materials, processes, and methods as needed to create something without a predetermined result. No Black (2013) belongs to a series of four biomorphic ceramic sculptures, each multicolored and glazed. Modeled from sheets of clay and glazed using different combinations of four out of a palette of five colorsalways omitting the color mentioned in the titlethe firing process allows the glazes to flow and merge across the surface, producing dynamic chromatic interactions.
Material transformation takes another turn in Lena Henkes sculpture Unforced Error (2025). A 2.5-meter-long amorphous body where human and animal forms blend into one, floats vertically in the space. Held by a purple lifting sling, a long, segmented horses joint is interwoven with the bust and face of Saint Barbarathe patron saint of architects, builders, and masons. Made from carved styrofoam that has been cast in aluminum, its presence is revealed in the meticulous, chased finish despite the cheapness of its materialoften associated with mass production and industrial use.
Alluding to American mathematician Claude E. Shannons information theory in its title, Franka Hörnschemeyers Slight Discrepancy 67/68 (2025) consists of two interlocking, puzzle-like elements made of composite wood panels and bitumen sheets. Only the upper part is fixed to the wall, while the lower one is held solely through its connection to itan interplay visible in the narrow gaps between the two forms. The work reflects Hörnschemeyers ongoing interest in the moment of contact between structures and the spaces that emerge in between.
Also concerned with systems and perception, Matt Mullican employs one of the oldest known methods of reproduction in his two-part rubbing Untitled (Cosmology and details, b&w) (2024). Carved wooden boards are transferred onto canvas by rubbing with oil sticks, producing images that manifest assumed realities and Platonic idealism in a hybrid medium between drawing and print.
With Spine I (2025), Leunora Salihu extends the dialogue between structure and organic form. Combining glazed ceramic and wood, the sculpture is composed of repeated segments conceived as a movement that could continue infinitely in space. The spinal columns precise regularity and upright stance are countered by the tactile warmth of terracotta. Depending on the viewers perspective, it might evoke an insects exoskeleton or even a chest of drawers, introducing ambiguity between function and vitality.
Representing a seminal historical position within the exhibition, Fred Sandbacks Untitled (Sculptural Study, Wall Construction) (1995/2013) consists of two precisely joined strandsorange above and black belowforming a single, attenuated vertical line that subtly reconfigures the wall as a spatial plane. By stretching strands of yarn from point to point to create geometric figures, Sandback articulated a new form of drawing in space, defining volume through absence.
The presentation concludes with two painterly positions that reexamine the logic of systems through image-making. In Tactic (2025), Dan Walsh playfully unfolds seriality and its subtle variations, constructing internal rhythms only to subvert them. The work continues his process-oriented approach, generating images that are restrained in vocabulary yet intricately layered in structure.
Bringing together analog and digital techniques, Jonas Weichsels most recent work from his series of TC Paintings extends his sustained analytic engagement with the conditions of painting. Through meticulous mixing, cataloguing, and arrangement of color, Weichsel examines the essence of the mediumits possibilities and limitationsas an ongoing inquiry into what an image can be today.
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Today's News
December 7, 2025
Bavarian museum returns long-lost Slevogt works to families of persecuted Jewish collectors
Berlin's Gemäldegalerie honors collector Christoph Müller with poignant exhibition on travel, memory, and home
Vintage 1930s California photographs by LeRoy Robbins on view in San Diego
New dinosaur footprints discovered in the Tehuacán-Cuicatlán biosphere reveal a window into Mexico's ancient past
Ancient home unearthed in La Lagunilla sheds new light on the borders of Tlatelolco's island settlement
Lisson Gallery Los Angeles presents major survey of Olga de Amaral
New exhibition reveals how coins became history's smallest fashion statements
George Eastman Museum receives Agha Jani Kashmiri archive
Casemore Gallery presents Owen Kydd and Kyle Tata in a dialogue on the fluid boundaries of photography
Is it alive or just pretending to be? The first Electronic Petting Zoo opens at ZKM │ Karlsruhe
Sammlung Goetz debuts new exhibition space with Elmgreen & Dragset: Handle with Care
Arter unveils Phantom Quartet, tracing rupture, cyclicality, and the hidden layers of Istanbul's history
Zander Galerie showcases Lee Friedlander's iconic Letters from the People in exhibition
Kunsthistorisches Museum unveils Oliver Laric's digital dialogue with ancient sculpture
Paper reinvented: Messums West unveils sculptural installations by Kaori Kato
New exhibition explores shifting artistic languages from the 1960s to today
The Rubin appoints three new trustees: Carole Corcoran, Chris Jones, and Aditya Salgame
Bluerider ART launches white trilogy of love across three Taipei venues
Driss Ouadahi merges architecture, ancestral motifs, and modernism in powerful new paintings
NYPL appoints Julie Golia and Bella Desai to lead research libraries into a new era of access and public engagement
Nairy Baghramian awarded Gold Medal by Art Basel Awards
David Klein's TWA designs break records at Swann
Museum presents Shine a Light: The Art and Life of Deb Koffman
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