[spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
STATE OF THE ART 2020
5. September bis 31. Oktober 2020
Die Ausstellung STATE OF THE ART 2020 ist ab dem 1. November nur noch als Textblog mit Abbildungen verfügbar. Wenn Sie auch nach Ende der Ausstellungslaufzeit Interesse an dem virtuellen Rundgang haben, kontaktieren Sie uns bitte per Email: kontakt (at) galeriepostel.de
Die Textversion der Ausstellung bleibt weiterhin bestehen – für den vollen Genuss klicken Sie gerne auf die Bilder, hinter einigen verbergen sich Videos oder Diashows, die zeitliche Abläufe oder verschiedene Ansichten abbilden.
Please scroll down for the works participating in the exhibition – and please do not hesitate to click on the images – further information and images are hidden behind many of them.
Links in the text connect to former exhibitions of the artist at galerie postel
works are listed in alphabetical order by artist
Any questions? We are happy to help!
kontakt (at) galeriepostel.de
Tel.: +49-40-22 85 39 24 – 0
for anything from information on works and artist’s biographies to prices or further material
[/spb_text_block] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
Amer Al Akel
Melting Their Power, 2020
lenticular print
60 x 90 cm
Please click on the image to start the video!
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
The most recent work by Amer Al Akel, „Melting their Power“, transfers the artist’s conceptual approach into the printing technique and still bears the same handwriting as did his contributions to the IN BETWEEN exhibition where an oversized game of chess, neon letters and a relief sculpted from Aleppo Soap made their point in a multitude of media that themselves were carriers of meaning.
Melting – that is the process the handcuffs made from frozen water undergo. The ephemeral process is documented in a video file and conserved in print. What meaning do the handcuffs imply? The artist deliberately leaves the question to the viewer. One thing, nevertheless, can be said concerning the lenticular technique: Whether the handcuffs are still there or not is a matter of perspective…
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
Ari Goldmann
Weep, 2020
oil and acrylic on canvas
80 x 120 cm
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
She is kneeling close to the edge, apparently naked but nevertheless barely recognizable by contour or features. Wet from something running down her body in shining neon orange.
Why? What are the circumstances? Why is she kneeling? Is she hurt? What is running down her body? And why has she not raised her arms to protect herself when she was obviously hit by something? She keeps her arms behind her back, helplessly giving in, presenting herself to the opponent, incapable of fleeing or to ward off the violent act. Is she free in her actions? Or forced to do so? Ari Goldmann keeps the viewer in the dark.
Most of Goldmann’s other paintings are based on images derived from the media, from books and newspapers. Through these he reflects upon the use of archetypal iconographic forms of our collective memory. But this time a photo the artist himself took, served as basis to the painting.
It was taken about a year ago, when the sculpture „big kneeling woman“ by Georg Seitz was vandalised in an attack using paint. The sculpture is kneeling at the end of a stone bench at the Alster walk close by the Alster meadows, a popular recreation area in Hamburg. She surmounts the seated flaneurs. The attack nevertheless contradicts any impression of free will or relaxation. The passive gesture might have been interpreted differently in the sixties when the sculpture was made, but where does one kneel as obedient as this while being abused?
Weep – the title transmits the amount of sadness the artist sees in this situation. As in his other works Ari Goldmann deletes any context relating to time and place in the process of abstraction, even the graffiti with its political implications that was applied to the bench during the attack. Reduced to its outlines the gesture of the figure becomes prominent as universal signifier.
This is not the single sculpture violated on a specific place in Hamburg, it is the universality of violence and passivity, of vulnerability and sadness in face of the violence that in the brightness of the neon colour sticks out from the black and white of the painting’s background.
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
Kathrin Haaßengier
liebelebe, 2020
wood, metal, glas, bulb, motor
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
Simon Halfmeyer
[/spb_text_block] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/2″ el_position=“first“]
splinter 02/20, 2020
Aquarell und Grafit auf Schichtpapier
121 x 181 cm, gerahmt
[/spb_text_block] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/2″ el_position=“last“]
o.T., 2019
Öl auf Leinwand
30 x 40 cm
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
In his recent works Simon Halfmeyer continues both lines of work that he introduced to the public both in the „Wandzeichnungen“ exhibition (2014) and the „Expetopia“ exhibition (2016): Wilderness in urban space investigated through his figurative drawings and abstraction filling the drawings from edge to edge achieving the impression of an endless „all-over“.
Drawing is the medium of choice to Simon Halfmeyer and he takes it to its limits in different materials and media. The abstract graphite drawings on laminate paper are executed in a format of 181 x 121 cm, rather expected from a painting and by sheer size meeting the observer in a physical eye to eye situation.
His more figurative works are a journey into the wilderness of the urban space. They are derived from an archive of hundreds of drawings and photos reappearing in other works: Palm trees and exotic plants from foyers, greenhouses, airports or shopping malls stand for the artificial construct of wilderness as imagined by civilization. This contrast is made visible through urban elements like sky scrapers or traffic lights.
These drawings are executed either like fresco painting, huge in size and directly on the wall, they can take the form of colour reliefs and are taken into the third dimension as sculptures. One work leads to another, elements are re-used, transformed and later find their way back into the archive their first version derived from. An organic growth through sampling process that is reminiscent of the growth of the jungle these drawings constitute.
The abstract series of „Stars“ more than any other of his reintroduces the „hand of the artist“ into the work. He draws the lines using a ruler in opposition to the organic forms of his plant drawings and forms the rhythm of the drawing by moving the lines bit by bit. A very physical process considering the drawing’s size.
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
Fadi al Hamwi
Sugar Forever, 2019
Performance, CAA Berlin
Please click on the image to start the slide show!
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
Whoever has missed out on Fadi al-Hamwis performance „Sugar Forever“ at CAA gallery, Berlin, in June 2019 is now given the chance for a digital re-evaluation with the photo documentation the artist contributed to STATE OF THE ART.
In about 10 days the artist transformed hundreds of kilos of loose sugar into cubes formed after the traditional building bricks as they are common in Syria. And the sheer dimension of the work is reflective of the situation: To al-Hamwi sugar in this context stands for two closely related aspects forming today’s society, colonialism with its consequences, amongst which migration, be it through people seeking refuge from war or hunger today.
What these dis- and replacements have in common is the need to find a new role and place in the country of arrival. To be part of the bricks that form society, symbolised by the metaphor of building and house. The process is not an easy one. Not all grains of sugar stay in place after the pressing process and there too are destructive forces, burning and melting the sugar bricks. But the majority of the bricks lines up in neat order, all formed by the artists hand as the directing, forming, structuring force.
With this performance Fadi al-Hamwi follows the path that he set in the IN BETWEEN exhibition at galerie postel in 2018/19, where he displayed a book pressed from sugar that read „Poisoned History“ on the title. MIgration, flight, the consequences of integrating in a new society also were reflected in the concrete rug „Irrational Loop of Dust“, two strings of al-Hamwis work, that come together in the latest performance „Sugar Forever“ on display at STATE OF THE ART today.
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
Sylvia Henze
Breaking the Mould, 2015
video installation, 1:21 min. loop
tablet, wood, concrete
146 x 31 x 22 cm
Please click on the image to start the video!
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
Katharina Kohl
Erinnerungslücken / Innere Sicherheit #2, 2020
video, 4:22:11 min.
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
Danijela Pivašević-Tenner
Triumphsäulen, 42 Szenen der Gegenwart
installation at the museum Tuch + Technik, Neumünster 2019
raw porcelain, textiles, mirror tiles
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
installation view at museum Tuch + Technik, Neumünster 2019
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
studio view 2019
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
Razan Sabbagh
Selbstporträt, 2020
Digitalprint 1/30 (2 AP)
auf DIN A2
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
Richard Schur
Air, 2017
Acrylic on nettle
180 x 140 cm
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
Helga Weihs
WO-1-2020, 2020
wenge
235 x 80 x 2,2 cm
Please click on the image to start the slide show!
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
[/spb_text_block] [spb_blank_spacer height=“30px“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“] [spb_text_block animation=“none“ animation_delay=“0″ simplified_controls=“yes“ custom_css_percentage=“no“ padding_vertical=“0″ padding_horizontal=“0″ margin_vertical=“0″ custom_css=“margin-top: 0px;margin-bottom: 0px;“ border_size=“0″ border_styling_global=“default“ width=“1/1″ el_position=“first last“]
Thank you for visiting STATE OF THE ART!
Please contact us for further information:
kontakt (at) galeriepostel.de
Tel.: +49-40-22 85 39 24 – 0
[/spb_text_block]