30 July 2019

André Butzer

untitled, 2007
Pencil on paper
32 × 24 cm

André Butzer
29 June – 7 September 2019
Gallery Kirchgasse, Steckborn

André Butzer

untitled, 2019
Acrylic and pencil on paper
37.1 × 28.7 cm

[from the pressrelease]
With his self-proclaimed “Science Fiction Expressionism,” André Butzer (1973) became one of the most renowned and influential painters of his generation in the mid-1990s. Between pop culture and world history, Butzer created a candidly expressive and comic-like art cosmology. His fictions forego a clear narration and a hermetic approach or stylistic features. Butzer’s works generate their own content and stories; painted energy positioned between geometry and arbitrariness, humor and severity, danger and charm.

With the N Paintings, a series begun in 2010, Butzer’s characteristic motifs and colors reappear. The works reveal their origins: line and plane, vertical and horizontal. The shift towards this radical abstraction was not a simple break with earlier paintings. Considered together, all images explore the reciprocal condition of figuration and abstraction, of fiction and the reality of painting.

André Butzer

Untitled, 2008
watercolor on paper
29 x 41 cm

André Butzer

untitled, 2019
Acrylic and pencil on paper
28.7 × 37.1 cm

1 June 2019

Christine Ödlund

Aspects of Linnaeus’ system of shape and color III, 2018
Plant pigment and acrylic medium on paper
72.5 x 53.4 cm

Modern Nature
Alberto Baraya, Mark Dion, Simryn Gill, Derek Jarman, Hilma af Klint, Margaret Mee, Christine Ödlund, David Thorpe, Viktor Timofeev
2 May – 7 July 2019
Drawing Room, London

29 April 2019

Marcel van Eeden

Alligator patrol 7, 2018
negropencil on paper
19 x 28 cm

[from the pressrelease]
Twenty-five years ago Marcel van Eeden (1965) had his first exhibition at Galerie Maurits van de Laar. During that solo exhibition, the outlines of his work started to take shape: cataloguing the time before 1965, the year of his birth. By drawing from photographic material from books and newspapers, he began appropriating that time like an archivist, a project impossible to ever complete, if only because of the infinite number of available images. Undaunted by this prospect, Van Eeden started to draw in his virtuoso style, building an impressive oeuvre that keeps expanding to this day. 

Around 2004, an element of fiction started to appear in his work when he introduced characters like Wiegand and Sollman for the purpose of weaving an increasingly intricate plot. The exhibition to celebrate the twenty-five-year collaboration with Marcel van Eeden includes a retrospective of works that over the years were sold through the gallery, as well as new drawings.

Marcel van Eeden

no title, 1996
neropencil on paper
19 x 14 cm

Marcel van Eeden

Alligator patrol 3, 2018
nero pencil on paper
28 x 19 cm

25 April 2019

David Shrigley

Untitled (Public Opinion), 2019
acrylic and oil bar on paper
83 x 58.4 cm

David Shrigley: Fluff War
25 April – 15 June 2019
Anton Kern Gallery, New York

David Shrigley

Untitled (Exhibition of dirt), 2019
acrylic and oil bar on paper
105 x 74 cm

[from the pressrelease]
In his seventh solo exhibition at Anton Kern Gallery, entitled FLUFF WAR, British artist David Shrigley presents a large-scale kinetic sculpture, two neon sculptures, and 100 new drawings.

As visitors approach the gallery, they are greeted by a two-part magenta neon sign bearing contradictory instructions: one reads “WEAR SHOES” and the other “DO NOT WEAR SHOES”. The storefront window signage will seem perfectly at home to a passerby, as the gallery is located in New York’s famed Fifth Avenue shopping district. Here you are initiated into the world of David Shrigley.

Inside, further into the space, is another neon sign announcing that you have entered the arena of “FLUFF WAR”, the exhibition’s eponymous work. The structure of FLUFF WAR is a ten foot by ten foot square enclosure akin to a miniature soccer stadium or a giant air hockey table. Trapped inside are clusters of black wooly fluff being blown about a smooth white floor by gusts of wind coming in through surrounding vents.

War is a cheeky misnomer for what the fluff is engaged in. Incapable of exerting its own will, the fluff is at the whim of hidden fans, randomly sequenced by a computer program, blowing at varying intervals and strengths. It remains unclear which fluff is winning or losing, what the objective is, or if there is one at all. Regardless, one can easily become an enraptured observer of this nonsensical activity.

David’s new drawings continue in his tradition of combining image and text to deliver comically deadpan messages that resonate on philosophical, ethical, and political levels. The large color works rendered in acrylic and oil bar read immediately like signs or advertisements, while the small black ink drawings are graphically complex, and invite the viewer to inspect closely. The benign declarations and mischievous wishes in Shrigley’s works express the pathos, tedium, irony, and oftentimes ridiculousness of everyday life.

David Shrigley

Untitled (Candidates), 2019
ink on paper
29.7 x 21 cm

David Shrigley

Untitled (Kindness), 2019
Oil bar and gesso on paper
105 x 74 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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