22 October 2022

Bernd Ribbeck

Untitled, 2022/004
acrylic, pigment marker and ballpoint pen on MDF
36 × 27 cm

Bernd Ribbeck
3 September – 22 October 2022
Kadel Wilborn, Düsseldorf

Bernd Ribbeck

Untitled, 2022/002
acrylic, pigment marker and ballpoint pen on MDF
33,6 × 25,6 cm

20 October 2022

Karl Haendel

Father Tranquilino “Jun” de Ocampo, Katholische Kirchengemeinde Heilig Geist, 2022
Pencil on paper
261 x 213 cm

Karl HaendelPraise Berlin
17 September – 22 October 2022
Wentrup Gallery, Berlin

Karl Haendel
Iman Said Ahmed Arif, Khadija Mosque, 2022
Pencil on paper
261 x 213 cm

Karl Haendel
Imam Seyran Ates, Ibn Rushd-Goethe Mosque, Berlin, 2022
Pencil on paper
261 x 213 cm

[from the pressrelease]
In a series of large-scale, realistic drawings depicting the hands of some of the city’s most inspiring Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, Jewish or Muslim leaders, Haendel pays homage to a diverse group of pastors, imams, rabbis and priests. As much this project is about religious diversity, it is also about ethnic and racial diversity. Berlin is growing more diverse as immigrants arrive. Besides its Catholic and protestant residents, there is large Muslim population, growing communities of Buddhists and Hindus, and a small but vibrant community of Jews. Highlighting how these communities of believers are vibrant, welcoming, and tolerant, the artist hopes to provide space for viewers to reassess their own systems of belief, embrace complexity, and expand their acceptance.
In the past two years I have been exploring the idea of group portraiture through the representation of hands. It is a novel way to make a portrait, allowing people to express themselves with gesture and nuance, but free from the tropes and standards of beauty associated with traditional representational portraiture. And in a time of pandemic when touching isn’t allowed, representing the hand seems only more interesting to me. The hands of religious leaders, as they pray or perform blessings or rituals, are filled with spiritual resonance, further compelling my interest in a time when faith in is short supply. And art across culture and time, from the hands of saints in Byzantine mosaics, to Buddha’s gestures in bronze sculpture, through to the mudras in Hindu iconography, have been filled with depictions of hands. This project continues that tradition, but with an emphasis on interfaith dialog and diversity. (Karl Haendel)
To make the work, the artist met with each leader in their house of worship, to talk about their faith, the history of their congregation in the city and to take reference photos of their hands. Back at his studio, Haendel digitally manipulated these photos to create new and often physically impossible hand compositions–contemporary reinterpretations of ritualistic hand gestures found in imagery across art history. But the digital affect is left imperceptibly visible (the same hand holding itself or a hand with too few or too many fingers), reminding us that these mystical and uncanny appendages are of the present. With these digital renderings used for reference, Haendel drew each hand portrait in pencil on paper, slowly and meticulously, at very large scale. In doing so, the artist uses his hand and labor to honor each leader’s labor, be it intellectual or as service to their community, as a kind of homage, expanding the definition of drawing to include ritual, meditation, and service.

18 October 2022

Janaina Tschäpe

Untitled (Portrait), 2022
Watercolor pencil on paper
87 × 67 × 4 cm

Janaina Tschäpe. Wandelstern
24 August – 22 October 2022
Galleri Bo Bjergaard

Janaina Tschäpe
Regenspiel, 2022
Watercolor and watercolor crayon on paper
110 × 158 cm

Janaina Tschäpe
Untitled (Portrait), 2022
Watercolor, watercolor crayon, colored pencil on paper
87 cm x 67 cm x 4 cm

Janaina Tschäpe
Colorfield Drawing VI, 2022
Watercolor and pencil on paper
113 cm x 162 cm

16 October 2022

Simon Schubert

Untitled (Licht durch Vorhang), 2022
graphite on paper
100 x 70 cm

Simon SchubertThe Architecture of Shadows
2 September – 29 October 2022
Martin Kudlek Gallery, Cologne

Simon Schubert
Untitled (schwarzes Loch), 2022
graphite on paper
138,5 x 108,5 cm

[from the pressrelease]
In the exhibition “The Architecture of Shadows” Simon Schubert shows new graphite drawings and a new group of sculptures, which can be defined as a continuation of his previous thematic and technical ways of working. The drawings and sculptures fit into Schubert’s ongoing project of constructing an imaginary building, which grows with each exhibition and artwork, and on which the artist has been working for many years. In “The Architecture of Shadows” the exhibited pieces expand the artist’s project with new views and interiors.
With his new works Simon Schubert studies aspects of different light phenomena, which have an impact on the perception of surfaces and spaces. At the same time, these works induce the reflection of questions about the lucidity and opacity of perceived phenomena on a metaphysical level.
Although the representational and technical elaboration of the chosen motifs prominently draws attention, the works do not solely focus physical effects. Rather the pieces emphasize the relational process of immanent and transcendent experience, by referring beyond the visual interplay of light and shadow and passages within in interiors.

Simon Schubert
Untitled (Drei Fenster), 2022
graphite on paper
100 x 70 cm

14 October 2022

Cy Twombly

Untitled, 2002
Acrylic, wax crayon, and pencil on handmade paper, in unbound handmade book, 16 pages
Each page (approximately): 56.9 x 38.7 cm

Cy Twombly
15 September – 17 December 2022
Gagosian Gallery

Cy Twombly
Untitled, 2004
Acrylic on canvas
213.7 x 151.7 cm

A weblog about contemporary drawing, art on paper, notes, scribbles and an occasional painting or photograph.
Curated by Stephan van den Burg

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