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Friday, January 9, 2026 |
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| Peeling back the past: Capitain Petzel navigates the maze of involuntary memory |
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Mike Kelley, City Boy Trauma Image (from Australiana), 1984. Acrylic on paper. 2 parts. Right: 157 x 128 cm. Courtesy Estate of Martin Kippenberger, Galerie Gisela Capitain, Cologne. Photo: Simon Vogel.
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BERLIN.- Capitain Petzel will open the group exhibition Not I, on view from January 9, 2026.
For the staging of Not I, a monologue which lends its name to this exhibition, Samuel Beckett stripped the theater stage, creating a barren visual field, where a striking pair of red lips, a character known as Mouth, floats in total darkness. Illuminated by a single beam of light and speaking at relentless speed, the monologue is delivered by a disembodied female voice. Both a cry of terror and recognition, Not I is representative of a life glimpsed in flashes, a self seen fragmented, a memory that insists even as it slips away. It consists of associations, thematic returns and obsessive circling. The absence of linear narrative creates a manic circularity and movement without progress, pouring out involuntary memories. Mouth attempts to distance herself from recurring images and phrases heard long ago. The past resurfaces through speech that mimics the chaotic flow of recollection, where images erupt involuntarily, overlapping and repeating in an attempt to both grasp meaning and escape it.
The works in this exhibition approach the act of recall as something unstable. Memorys return is involuntary and comes as a storm breaking over consciousness. The fractured nature of Becketts monologue mirrors this. Mouth's obsessive refusal of the I is the hallmark of disavowal. It is a desperate attempt to keep experience at arms length.
The exhibition offers a more accommodating counterpoint, in which memorys fragments are allowed to surface. Gina Follys (b. 1983; Lives and works in Basel) works make this dynamic tangible, with fragile organic remnants functioning as tender residues of experience and memory. Urban Zellwegers (b. 1991; Lives and works in Zurich) paintings transform familiar pizza boxes into blurred landscapes that echo the distortions of memory over time. Similarly, William Gauchers (b. 1993; Lives and works In Berlin) compositions can be seen as accumulations of painterly gestures, where traces of art-historical memory surface through layered marks. His canvases assemble residues of past images and methods into a syntax that feels familiar, echoing Becketts approach in which meaning emerges through the build-up of repetitions and hesitant returns.
Memory always insists, even if the self refuses to claim it. The result is a voice caught between confession and flight, compelled to articulate what it cannot acknowledge as its own not I. This dynamic finds a powerful counterpoint in Hanne Darbovens (b. 1941; d. 2009) Hommage an meinen Vater (Homage to my father), which approaches memory through accumulation, repetition and duration. Hand-inscribed sheets transform personal loss into a monumental system of notation, where grief is methodically repeated until it becomes a defined, visible structure.
In Becketts Not I, the voice is severed from the body, speaking without pause or control, an articulation driven less by intention than by compulsion. This sense of being overtaken, of speaking before understanding, finds resonance in the works in the exhibition, where forms and narratives seem to emerge from places, where the past insists. It transforms what in Beckett appears as crisis into an act of recognition, opening room for the past to return in unruly shapes. Martin Kippenbergers (b. 1953; d. 1997) installation Jetzt geh ich in den Birkenwald, denn meine Pillen wirken bald (Now I'm going to the birch forest, because my pills will soon take effect), with its distorted birch trunks and scattered pills, stages a forest as a site of psychological disorientation, where perception buckles.
Daria Blums (b. 1992; Lives and works in London) photographic prints reflect instability, depicting selves that appear doubled or refracted. Xie Leis (b. 1983; Lives and works in Paris) painting, with its two spectral figures dissolving into one another, echoes the exhibitions recurring sense of selves drifting, overlapping, and becoming indistinct in the currents of memory. Mike Kelleys (b. 1954; d. 2012) Trauma Images bear a cartoon-like innocence, coupled with violent imagery and unsettling, nightmarish tension. Monika Sosnowskas (b. 1972; Lives and works in Warsaw) Ghosts, winding metal armatures that resemble a human body, appear like the remnants of gestures or movements. Ilaria Vincis (b. 1991; Lives and works in Zurich) paintings, structured as onions with their concentric skins concealing an inner maze, deepen this reflection on how memory unfolds. They suggest an interiority that can only be approached through gradual peeling. The works in the exhibition trace different paths through the unstable terrain of recollection, each offering a material analogue to the fractured inner landscape Beckett renders through a solitary voice.
Tomass Aleksandrs
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