Museum Brandhorst
Munich
Theresienstrasse 35a
+49 (0)89 238052286
WEB
Georg Herold
dal 17/4/2012 al 1/9/2012
daily except mon 10-18, thu 10-20

Segnalato da

Tine Nehler



 
calendario eventi  :: 




17/4/2012

Georg Herold

Museum Brandhorst, Munich

Multiple Choice. All of his works are based on the principle of the collage or montage, even his primary intention is not one of innovation or originality but of discrepancy and contradiction. 50 works are exhibited in rooms on the ground floor which lend theyself to illustrating the connections and contradictions in relation to works by other artists in the Brandhorst Collection such as Sigmar Polke, Joseph Beuys, Eric Fischl.


comunicato stampa

Munich, April 2012 | Like virtually no other artist of our times, Georg Herold ironically cites the art of the 20th century in its diverse forms, rendering it disillusionary or absurd. Herold is not a painter although he creates pictures, not a sculptor although he makes sculptures and installations, not an architect although he builds. He embodies the negation of the artistic world in the academic tradition. All of his works are based on the principle of the collage or montage, even his primary intention is not one of innovation or originality but of discrepancy and contradiction. His demystification of established notions that have become the norm does not stop in the face of Kazimir Malevitch, Marcel Duchamp, Donald Judd and Joseph Beuys, among others, either. In this way Herold breaks away from conventional codes in art and encourages others to reflect upon functions they are still capable of perceiving at all, and to which they can turn today. He is considered one of the most important and influential artists not only of his own generation.

In the early 1980s Georg Herold used cheap roof slats and, since 1988/89, has repeatedly worked with expensive Beluga caviar in his pictures, objects, multiples and installations. The plain wooden slats still play a pivotal role in his works to this day, since – as he says – they “can be made to match every statement exactly.” While such objects were considered non-aesthetic at that time, the use of caviar was seen as a provocation. Bafflement changed into a slight feeling of horror and a certain disgust. Over the past 40 years, an extensive and complex œuvre has been created that has been shown successfully in numerous solo and thematic exhibitions both nationally and internationally. Apart from roof slats and caviar, Herold has repeatedly used bricks, thread, buttons and nails as well as tea strainers, handbags, nylon tights, carpets, etc. “As a matter of principle, I never use materials that speak their own language. That’s why I pick on rough, stupid materials that don’t ask questions,” the artist says.

In the past few years Herold has, surprisingly, returned to the human figure. Through his sketchily outlined figures he aims at showing how mankind has not just become alienated from itself in a stupor brought on by modern civilisation, but is simultaneously puzzling and trite, aggressive and defenceless, sexually uninhibited and disembodied, affected and coarse – or more precisely, Herold’s slat figures are not role models of mankind but bundles of highly contradictory characteristics, possibilities and capabilities. As such, they illustrate the status quo.

The concept of the exhibition was devised together with the artist, while it was clear that the multiples and sculptures in the Brandhorst Collection would be included. Apart from recent works, older ones are also on display to highlight contextual and formal correlations.

Individual works are exhibited in rooms on the ground floor which lends itself to illustrating the connections and contradictions in relation to works by other artists in the Brandhorst Collection such as Sigmar Polke, Joseph Beuys, Eric Fischl and Jannis Kounellis, among others.

There are fifty works by the artist in the Brandhorst Collection that the Museum is now exhibiting together with a similar number of other figurative works and installations until 2 September. Georg Herold’s works can be found in a number of private and public collections.

Georg Herold was born in Jena in 1947. He was arrested in 1973 for attempting to flee from East Germany. Having been sentenced to prison, his release was funded by West Germany. After a brief period in Munich, he began studying under Sigmar Polke in Hamburg and, while there, became friends with Werner Büttner, Martin Kippenberger and Albert Oehlen, among others. He has held a professorship at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf since 1999. Herold lives and works in Cologne. The exhibition is presented in selected rooms on the ground floor and lower level of the Museum Brandhorst and is accompanied by a programme of guided tours and related events.

An exhibition catalogue has been published by Snoeck Verlag with essays by Rudi Fuchs, Friedrich Wolfram Heubach and Armin Zweite, as well as catalogue entries for the multiples in the Brandhorst Collection. All exhibited works are illustrated. In addition, there is a biography and a bibliography.

Guided tours with the Museum Director
TUE 8.5.2012, 3 pm
TUE 10.7.2012, 3 pm
With Armin Zweite, Director of the Collection
The number of participants is limited. Tickets available 1 hour in advance at the museum cash desk
Guided tours of the exhibition
The number of participants is limited. Tickets available 1 hour in advance at the museum cash desk
TUE 24.4.2012, 3 pm | Anna Rühl
SAT 19.5.2012, 3 pm | Stefanie Manthey: Help Yourself. Thinking and doing things yourself as an artistic code of practice
SAT 26.5.2012, 3 pm | Alina Langer
TUE 5.6.2012, 3 pm | Alina Langer
Tues. 19.6., 3 pm | Elisabeth Bushart, Restorer, and Anna Rühl
Nylons, Slats, Caviar. Georg Herold’s Materials. A guided tour in dialogue
TUE 17.7.2012, 3 pm | Alina Langer
TUE 24.7.2012, 3 pm | Anna Rühl
TUE 31.7.2012, 3 pm | Alina Langer
SAT 4.8.2012, 3 pm | Stefanie Manthey: Small Intrusions. Means of protest in Georg Herold’s works
SAT 1.9.2012, 3 pm | Alina Langer: On Parting

Seminar
THU 17.5.2012, 2-4.30 pm or THU 2.8.2012, 6–8 pm
Isn’t it ironic ... Irony as a counter-strategy. Seminar with Stefanie Manthey, Assistant Curator, Kunstmuseum Basel
Regular price 15,00 € | reduced 12,00 €
Seminar with limited number of participants.
Reservations under palais@pinakothek.de or P +49.89.23805-198

Events
TUE 10.7.2012, 7 pm
All about me. Dialogue with the artist. Georg Herold and Armin Zweite, Director of the Collection
Admission 5,00 €
All guided tours and associated events are held in German. English guided tours may be booked at palais@pinakothek.de.

Image: Georg Herold (*1947), P.F.U.I., 1984, vodka bottle, printed label, diameter: 29 x 7 cm. Photo: Haydar Koyupinar © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2012

Further information and images are available by calling + 49.89.23805-1321 or via email at presse@museum-brandhorst.de

Tine Nehler M.A.
Head of Press Department
Pinakotheken im Kunstareal | Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen
Kunstareal | Barer Straße 29 | D 80799 München
T + 49.89.23805-253 | F + 49.89.23805-125
E-mail: presse@museum-brandhorst.de
The Press Dept. on the Internet: www.pinakothek.de/press

Press Preview: 18.4.2012, 11 am
Opening: 18.4.2012, 19 pm
The artist will be present at the press conference and opening

Museum Brandhorst
Theresienstrasse 35a - Munich
Daily except MO 10.00 - 18.00
THU 10.00 - 20.00
Open: Dec. 26, New Year (Jan. 1), Twelfth Day (Jan. 6), Good Friday, Easter Monday, Whit Monday, National holiday (Oct. 3)
Closed: Shrove Tuesday, May Day (1 May), Christmas Eve (24 Dec.), Assumption Day, Christmas Day (25 Dec.), New Year´s Eve (31 Dec.)
Regular admission 7,00 € | Concessions 5,00 €
Sunday admission 1,00 €
Day pass 12,00 € | for the Museum Brandhorst, all three Pinakothek Museums, the Sammlung Schack and the Branch Galleries of the Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen, no special exhibitions, no further Concessions

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