forms ain‘t formats


with Felix Becker, Fabian Hub, Frank Moll, Irina Ojovan, Yannick Riemer, Laura Sachs

June 29 – August 10, 2019
Opening: June 28, 2019 | 7 – 9pm

 

Loock Galerie is pleased to present six young artists in Berlin in the show "forms ain’t formats". All six have in common that they use the canvas as support and at the same time as an object of artistic enquiry. The result are paintings that might also be interpreted as drawings, collages, reliefs, assemblages, or even sculptures. Noticeable is that all works are rooted in the medium of painting and a fundamental trust in its possibilities. The artists in this show also have in common that they either recently graduated from art school, or are about to graduate. And that they already have international experience with gallery shows, art fair presentations, or artist-in-residence programs.

 

"forms ain’t formats" presents selected works of these six artists to discuss various strategies of composition that use the material contingency of the support as an opposite - counterpart, antagonist - in the creative process. In the well-known terrain of the rectangular format, the six artists use different paths to create paintings, some with and some without figurative representations, that create an unusually high degree of narration and spatiality. The shapes and figures point beyond the limits of the format and establish direct contact with their immediate surroundings. The creation of the painting as a material object is always traceable. The viewer has the opportunity to continue the thought in a dialectics between material and painting. 

 

For her visual compositions that are reduced to just a fewgeometrical planes, Irina Ojovandraws on personal memories and experiences that in turn are inspired by architectural, spatial areas, directions, shadows, light, and emotions. They are, as were, syntheses of memory worlds that transcend time that Ojovan transforms into abstract forms. In the exhibition, two paintings from the series "Sarmizegetusa" (started in 2016) that consists primarily of two monochrome black color fields of different quality, matt or shiny and reflective, this alone, it seems, allows Ojovan to demarcate the entire surface between background and foreground, transparency and opacity, between the ephemeral and the constant. For the artist, black stands both for silence and the invisible. So do these paintings show us as much as they don’t show us? The title refers to a bygone place, the military, religious and political center of the Dacians. Factual history, individual memories and a balancing of just a few plane pictorial elements - in this contested field, the material remains the object of the artistic exploration. Here, every color and every material opens emotional spaces and associative fields. Ojovan’s self-declared aim is to find and maintain a balance of given and withheld painterly information and beholding action. 

 

Free fields of association can be found in the work of Laura Sachs. She treats the surface of the canvas on all sides. Some canvases are painted on the reverse side, until partially black areas seep through to the front side. Dust particles settle on the material during the process of painting and are integrated into the work’s genesis. Are they overexposed filmstrips from a decade long gone? Or worn cassette covers? A moonscape? The associations are decisively ruptured by a straight line running down vertically from the top of the painting. Is it a division between two different dimensions of painting, a la Barnett Newman? Probably not, because the line, as decisively as it is drawn, does not run all the way down to the lower edge of the canvas, but ends abruptly in the middle of the pictorial plane. In this way, Sachs opens up the format of the canvas with respect to the plane - reminiscent of Julije Knifer’s minimalist paintings, the black line, like a fissure lifts the plane canvas up and transforms it into a potential space. On the other hand, with Sachs, the black line turns out to be a metal rail which, heavy and accurate in contrast to the natural cotton material, seems to delimit the depth of the canvas, like the wall where it hangs. 

 

Frank Moll emphasizes the canvas format by means of horizontal lines that are vertically interrupted and thus only really formed in the eye of the beholder. They are interrupted precisely at the same moment, so that lines and interruptions seem to follow an invisible trace. As a result, they seem to float in painterly space, or to be superimposed on the canvas as grids. Moll works in layers to bring forth the lines from the material of the paint, and to bring what has been covered back to the surface. The horizontal lines form partial wave-like shapes, leading to associations with frequency graphs from the fields of medicine and music. Moll’s "string paintings" could be in a wider sense understood as pulse-giving or composing painting. The original inspiration for them came from May Spils movie "Zur Sache, Schätzchen", where Martin, played by Werner Emke, represents his life as a row of crosses and strikes one out every day. "Angenommen ich werde 50" is the title of a triptych by Moll that quotes the figure of Martin and takes his logic of crossing out as an abstracted representation of lived time further. Lines as days of an entire human life? What could the wave shapes mean? That the days were shorter? More exciting? Or just that the food was worse? 

 

The graphic representation of codifications and encryption systems is the matrix for the works of Yannick Riemer. By appropriating and transforming such codes and signs, the artist develops a network of cryptic fragments of language and symbols which he gradually condenses until they are hard - and indeed often impossible - to decode. The result is a world that invites us to venture interpretations, but never seems accessible. On paper or canvas, the different media, such as collage, drawing, painting, and silkscreen are superimposed on one another. The condensation of signs and symbols is continued beyond individual supports, by way of copying, enlarging, mirroring, transforming, printing, and reassembling these fragments. In his latest works, Riemer engages with pseudo-scientific theories that cast doubt on foundational positions and findings of the natural sciences. Cross-generational fears, the search for security, and the articulation of absurd worldviews become a thematic point of departure for new compositions and the expansion of Riemer’s sign vocabulary. For this, the artist uses old, discarded topographical maps as visual material that he cuts up and integrates into his dense and seemingly infinite universe of signs.  

 

Once our gaze gets lost in the smoky, foggy cloud shapes, Fabian Hub’s pictorial space seems infinite. We can hold on to pictorial elements that are not decisively posited, but rather decisively worked out. The paintings are preceded by a long physical finding process that starts with initial lines and notes in charcoal which are directly placed on the canvas. Areas are painted over, erased, posited again, expanded, and articulated repeatedly. The artist collages with paper, photographs, painted remnants of canvas, and drawings, all of which, just like charcoal and paint, have to hold their own in the entire compositional process before pieces are ripped out again. If something belongs together after all, it is but pack together with surgical precision. Sometimes he uses the actual depth of the stretcher frame for a spatial arrangement of the pictorial fragments so that, just like with an assemblage, the three-dimensional quality of the canvas-painting is emphasized. What differentiates Hub’s painting from Robert Rauschenberg’s Combine Painting, however, is his concentration on the canvas format. While the overhang of material assemblages beyond the format into the exhibition space might also be interpreted as an expansive gesture, Hub’s gestures seem to embed themselves not just into the format, but also into the concept of painting as resonating body. We can sense here the artist interrogating his own intuition. What trace do I leave behind today? What thoughts are circulating in my head? And what of all of this might be still important tomorrow?   

 

The physical process of composition also becomes apparent in Felix Becker’s paintings. His canvases carry a clear excess of paint from which he develops the paintings. The classic materials of pure linen fabric and oil paint as well as the chosen quantity of paint are an overemphasis of the subject as well as an overemphasis of the figurative that is material. However, we won’t find concrete figures in Becker’s paintings. Like everything else that is alluded to, they seem to hide in the paint, growing only through their three-dimensional form from the format into space. Becker is interested in colors that can best be defined in the interstices: greenish-blue, grey-pink, blackish-blue, reddish orange or minty white. The choice and blending of the paints as well as the size of the support are as it were the only premises of the picture’s genesis. When it is finished it might inspire specific imaginations. Becker only intends these to a limited degree. Instead, he wants the material to participate and make its own decisions. For his painting process, working with monochrome layers of paint that always cover the entire canvas like a relief is important. The negation of lower layers is part of the plan. We see a painting that has “grown” and lived through several states, structures of which remain partially visible or can be sensed. A painting, that is to say, which in a certain sense we cannot see or at least never fully grasp. 

"forms ain´t formats" draws a line from concrete, constructed painting that manifests itself in certain materials to paintings that are only decided within a physical dialogue with the artistic means. So on the one hand we find in these works imagination that materializes itself, and on the other hand material that becomes imagination. 

 

curated by Miriam Jesske

 

Felix Becker (born in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, in 1987) lives and works in Berlin. Since graduating (2014, state exam) with a first degree in art and philosophy from Goethe-Universität in Frankfurt, he has been studying fine arts with professors Valérie Favre and Thomas Zipp at Berlin’s Universität der Künste. In addition to numerous exhibitions in Germany, including at Haus am Waldsee Berlin (2017), Becker has also shown his work in gallery exhibitions in France and the US. In collaboration with Galerie Maus Contemporary in Birmingham, USA, which started in 2018, his works have been presented at Positions Berlin Art Fair (2018), Pulse Miami Beach (2018), paperpositions (2019) and Volta Basel (2019).

 

Fabian Hub (born in Mainz, Germany, in 1988) began his art studies at Kunsthochschule Mainz with professor Friedemann Hahn (2012-2015) and has been studying at Berlin’s Universität der Künste since 2015 in the class of professor Thomas Zipp. In 2017 he received the prize of the Schulz-Stübner-Stiftung and took part in an artist-in-residence program in Finland (Nelimarkka Museo, Alajärvi). In 2018/19 he worked on a residence scholarship in Schlingensief's opera village in Burkina Faso and is currently located in Neuruppin with a studio scholarship, sponsored by the Foundation for Futuristic Research.

 

Frank Moll (born in Grevesmühlen, Germany, in 1988) lives and works in Leipzig. From 2012 he studied fine arts with professor Anke Doberauer at the Akademie der Künste in Munich as well as painting and graphic arts with professor Oliver Kossack at Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst in Leipzig (2015/16). In 2016 he returned to the Akademie der Künste in Munich and finished his studies in 2018/19 as a master student of professor Gregor Hildebrandt. In November his works will be on display at the Salon der Gegenwart in Hamburg.

 

Irina Ojovan (born in Chisinau, Moldavia, in 1988) studied at the Academies of Fine Arts in Turin (2009/10 with professorFranco Fanelli), Rome (2010-2013 with Prof. Giuseppe Modica) and Munich (from 2012 with professors Günther Förg, Matthias Dornfeld and Gregor Hildebrandt). She completed her studies last year as a master student with professor Gregor Hildebrandt. Since April 2019 she has been working with the Winsor & Newton Residency Scholarship at Künstlerhaus Bethanien in Berlin. Her works were exhibited there until the beginning of May and can currently be seen in Milan at The Flat - Massimo Carasi.  

 

Yannick Riemer (born in Holzminden, Germany, in 1990) completed his training as a graphic artist in 2013 and has been studying visual arts at Berlin’s Universität der Künste since 2014 in the class of professor Thomas Zipp. He participated in several artist-in-residence programs over the past two years, including the residency fellowships of the Nelimarkka Museo, Alajärvi in Finland (2017) and the Schlingensief Opera Village in Burkina Faso (2018/19). He is currently working in Neuruppin, supported by the Foundation for Futuristic Research. His artistic work was honored with the Walter Stöhrer Prize for Graphics and the Prize for Painting of the Ulrich und Burga Knispel Foundation.

 

Laura Sachs (born in Darmstadt, Germany, in 1985) has been living and working in Berlin since 2019. Starting her studies in 2013 at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf with professor Hubert Kiecol she graduated in 2018 as a master student with professor Gregor Schneider. In 2017, she won the art prize "Von Rundstedt". Her works have been exhibited in numerous national and international galleries and museums, including Kunstpalast Düsseldorf (2019), Galerie Alber, Cologne (2019), K21 Kunstsammlung NRW, Düsseldorf (2019), Studio Picknick, Berlin (2018), Galery Kenilworth, Milwaukee/USA (2018), and Cubus-Kunsthalle, Duisburg.