Corinne Wasmuht at KÖNIG GALERIE

Corinne Wasmuht at KÖNIG GALERIE, installation view, photo: Roman März.

KÖNIG GALERIE is pleased to present new works by Corinne Wasmuht in the main hall of the gallery (St. Agnes I Nave). Conceived especially for the exhibition, the architecture refers to a space of transit, which is a main topic within the artist’s ouevre. Here, a total of six works are on show, all of which were finished during the last year.

Corinne Wasmuht’s complex, multifaceted pictorial worlds develop through a gradual, painstaking process of painting which in a certain sense already begins with her sitting at the computer. Wasmuht selects single motifs and elements from a large collection of photographs that she has taken and combines them in different ways until she finds the basis for her new motif. Once the artist has actually started to paint and has transferred the elements onto the wooden or aluminum surface one by one, the image is freed from its digital template and continues to develop through the dynamic nature of its origin.

Corinne Wasmuht, oT, oil on wood, 2017, 254 x 254 cm.

Despite their complexity and overwhelming, puzzle-like juxtaposition and superposition of different, often very small forms, the works radiate a deep sense of calm, acting as silent invitations to contemplation. They feature urban, often futuristic scenes reminiscent of airport terminals,pedestrian zones and museum halls, yet they are fragmented and overlapping,they appear both sparse and dense. Architectural structures collide with schematic representations of vegetation and human figures, large monochrome planes are superimposed with detailed, crystalline structures that cover large sections of the image like abstract gaps that nevertheless take up space, recalling digital aesthetics.

In addition to fragmentation and restructuring, repetition is another important element in Corinne Wasmuht’s artistic strategy. Single motifs sometimes resurface in a number of works, often several years apart. The work entitled U1 on show in the exhibition, for instance, features an exact excerpt from Uqbar 1 from 2011. By focusing on a specific section of the image, the artist develops a new narrative in the current piece that mines the structure and dynamic nature of the differently rendered details.

Corinne Wasmuht at KÖNIG GALERIE, installation view, photo: Roman März.

The structuring use of spatial perspective and alignment have a strong impact on the compositions, inexorably sucking the viewer into the image. The images seem readable, as well as pixellated, and the human brain immediately tries to translate the dense yet also clearly delineated forms into a real spatial situation or to identify what is being portrayed. The impossibility of understanding what is happening in the image at first glance further intensifies the process of contemplating it. Like a large panoramic painting, Wasmuht’s works open up an inexhaustible cosmos of different pictorial elements that relate to one another, but that also dominate the pictorial space in and of themselves.

Born in 1964 in Dortmund, Corinne Wasmuht lives and works in Berlin and Karlsruhe. She studied painting at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf. She has been a professor at the Staatliche Akademie der bildenden Künste, Karlsruhe since 2006. Her work has been awarded numerous prizes and can be seen in solo and group shows, for example at the Venice Biennial, Venice, Italy; Albright-Knox-Museum, Los Angeles, USA; Städel Museum, Frankfurt/Main,Germany; Kunstmuseum Stuttgart, Germany; and Kunsthalle zu Kiel, Germany.

CORINNE WASMUHT

ST. AGNES | NAVE

20TH JANUARY – 25TH FEBRUARY 2018

OPENING: 19. JANUARY 2018, 6 – 9 PM

Writing and photographs via press release provided by the gallery and artist.

Corinne Wasmuht, Castor, oil on wood, 2017, 179 x 187 cm.
Corinne Wasmuht at KÖNIG GALERIE, installation view, photo: Roman März.
Avatar photo

Photo Story

Press release and photographs courtesy of the gallery and the artists. If you would like to submit your photo story or article, please email [email protected].

Social media & sharing icons powered by UltimatelySocial