VIENNA.- To this day, the unproductive opposition between painting and conceptualism as two eternal adversaries in a mythical antagonism between painted/bad art market art and conceptually safeguarded/good exhibition art continues to have an effect. All the more surprising, then, is how much the debate over the pros and cons of paintingwhich reached its peak around 1980 with wild or neo-expressionist paintingstill affects artists today who had only marginal involvement with that specific historical constellation.
The works created between 1981 and 1990 by Stano Filko (19372015), which are the focus of this exhibition, are also often labeled neo-expressionist in their reception. In fact, these worksespecially his installation Love of Ontology(1982), presented at documenta 7are frequently placed directly in the context of the then-emerging wild painting as it was especially promoted by the Neue Wilde movement in Germany. Among these works are primarily paintings, but also assemblages, collages, and ensembles made from found objects of everyday (artistic) use, which, through the deliberate addition of color, are pushed into the domain of painting.
If one also considers the artists biographical situationfollowing his emigration from then-Czechoslovakia, with stays first in Duisburg and later, from December 1982, in Buffalo and New York, as well as the resulting, at times, precarious living and working conditionsit may even be possible to argue for a certain exceptional status of these works (in the sense of an American period). This body of work stands out from an oeuvre that is otherwise extremely multifaceted but is generally understoodand rightly sounder the sign of conceptualism. What may seem quite plausible at first glance, however, appears more problematic upon closer inspection.
In fact, the paintingsoften large- and medium-format, vividly colored, and worked on both sides, usually on self-constructed supportsare executed with great verve: nasty or even bad painting we could say. The works can be grouped thematically: there are images with more or less pornographic, in any case explicitly sexualized themes (male and predominantly female genitalia, fellatio); text-based works referring to the artists identity, origin, and condition, as well as formative impressions from his environment (FILKO, SLOVAK, STAN, AIDS). In addition, there are various hybrid forms that can be understood, on the one hand, as geometric-modular abstractions reflecting Filkos lifelong interest in the utopian potential of classical modernism, as well as in the critical use of what Benjamin Buchloh termed aesthetics of administration as a structural feature of conceptual art. On the other hand, if we consider that the artist was forced to paint by circumstance, a clear sense of continuity emerges. These works demonstrate that Stano Filkos conceptual ambitionto organize his oeuvre as a meta-discourse structured through both, objects and references, first elaborated in the 1960swas not abandoned.
Filkos oeuvre, namely, does not simply result from the accumulation of artworks over time as the output of a lean, mean studio machine typical of the 1980s. Rather, it forms its own cosmos, so to speak secured by a semi-permeable boundary. As Jan Verwoert has pointed out, this cosmos has the world as a medium at its disposal only to suspend this/our worldits laws of matter, space, and time, as well as the actually prevailing social, cultural, economic, and political conditionswithin an artistically autonomous counter-world. This also helped compensate for the limited demand for Filkos works in the art market metropolis of New York. It is therefore hardly surprising that, faced with this modest reception, he began in the United States to develop his conceptual ambition into a fictitious institution, the Archive SF, which he would later realize in Bratislava after 1990 as a Gesamtkunstwerk.
Even if Filkos works from the 1980s may at first appear expressive and wild, they do not comfortably fit into the debate surrounding so-called wild painting, which at the time was marketed under various labelssuch as arte cifra, Neue Wilde, Transavanguardia, or, more generally, Neo-Expressionismand led to a veritable boom in painting that, in keeping with the periods notion of international, remained largely confined to Western Europe and the United States.
What its supporters once enthusiastically celebrated as a full-on rebirth of painting (Zdenek Felix), in the spirit of a renewed subjectivity, in fact represented only a small segmentformally, conceptually, and stylisticallyof what painting as a genre, discourse, and practice already encompassed at the time. Moreover, while wild painting derived its momentum from the claim that it had broken with conceptual artdismissed as consisting of drab forms and brittle thoughts (drögen Formen und spröden Gedanken, Jochen Hohmeyer), supposedly dominant in the previous decadeprogressive art criticism of the time rejected it as a reactionary retour à lordre or, again following Buchloh, even as a regression.
It is therefore fitting that Tomá trauss, a Slovak art historian and curator who, like Filko, emigrated to Germany and was at times his companion, largely ignored the conceptual dimension of Filkos documenta contribution and, likely due to its overtly gestural painting, declared that the long list of the Neue Wilde has now gained another name.
Not only did painting have an increasingly difficult standing among progressives during the comprehensive conceptualization of art in the 1960s and 1970s. In the socialist countries of the Eastern Bloc, it was also tainted by its association with official state art. This makes Filkos intensified use of painting in the 1980s all the more interestingand certainly not in terms of adaptation, a break, or a regression.
As one of the central protagonists of conceptualism in the 1960s and 1970s, Filkos oeuvre, in retrospect, appears almost exemplary of an intermedial, transdisciplinary, and context-aware artistic practice whichdespite the vastly different conditions shaped by Cold War bloc politics on either side of the Iron Curtainhelped establish the foundations for our present-day, post-conceptual understanding of art. According to Peter Osborne, its defining feature is to be anywhere or not at alland no longer tied to specific genres, media, styles, or forms of objects or works.
So why should someone like Filko, who has the world as a medium at his disposal, not also make productive use of the medium of paintingeven if it does not currently fit?
Hans-Jürgen Hafner