Raymond Moody's Blues. Dreamer,melancholic and optimist, Kunath is an enigmatic presence in the work he creates. For this exhibition he presents an installation of new paintings, sculptures and a video.
Dreamer, jester, melancholic and optimist, Friedrich Kunath is an enigmatic presence
in the work he creates. For his first solo exhibition in a UK public gallery Kunath
presents an installation of new and recent painting, sculpture and video at Modern
Art Oxford. The exhibition title references Raymond Moody, the American
psychologist and medical doctor who in 1975 coined the term ‘near-death experience’.
Here, as in all his work, Kunath draws on a myriad of inspirations and sources in a
playful balance of joy and melancholy, seeking to evoke a mood he refers to as ‘sad
optimism’.
A tennis court of sorts is suggested in the Upper Gallery, with green carpet, a net
strung across the space, and line markings dividing the gallery into zones. A cast
of characters in related pairs, including sea otters, ghosts and gnomes, sit
alongside sculptural objects, such as oversized burnt matches, large brown loafers,
and the polyhedron from Albrecht Dürer’s Melencolia I balanced on the nose of a
seal.
The paintings that occupy the walls contain imagery sourced from landscape
engravings, still lifes and slapstick cartoons, combined to create narrative
associations that fluctuate between humour and pathos. The large mural-sized work
Life After Life (2013), with its palm trees and blue sky, hints at the tennis court
on which Kunath himself plays, but also acts as a ‘blank canvas’, a site for
graffiti, and a divide between one realm and the next.
The film You Go Your Way and I’ll Go Crazy (2012) has an ageing LA artist as the
central protagonist. Stylish yet forlorn he sails, swims and plays tennis alone. The
affluent trappings belie his evident malaise, and the pensive soundtrack, composed
by the Calder Quartet in close collaboration with Kunath and Maxwell Sterling,
emphasizes the sense of someone unraveling at the seams.
Kunath was born in Chemnitz, East Germany, and after a childhood in Berlin and time
working in Cologne he relocated to Los Angeles in 2008. These new surroundings,
between the desert and the Pacific Ocean, have further influenced the tone and form
of his work, accentuating some of the recurring themes that have long been central
to his artistic vocabulary. Kunath has said about the influence of this West Coast
environment 'I guess the colours got brighter and the topics got darker. Sunshine
and Noir.’
Biography
Friedrich Kunath was born in Chemnitz, Germany in 1974, and now lives and works in
Los Angeles. He has presented solo exhibitions at the Sprengel Museum , Hannover
(2012), Schinkel Pavillon, Berlin (2011), the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles (2010),
Kunstverein Hannover (2009), Kunsthalle Baden-Baden (2009) and Aspen Art Museum
(2008). Forthcoming exhibitions in 2014 include presentations at Centre d’art
contemporain d’Ivry – le Crédac, Ivry-sur-Seine, and Kunsthalle Bremerhaven,
Bremerhaven.
Related events:
Saturday 21 September, 1pm
Friedrich Kunath in conversation with author and cultural critic Michael Bracewell.
Hannah Evans
Communications Manager
Modern Art Oxford
T: 01865 813 826 (DDI)
M:07817268998
F: 01865 722573 hannah.evans@modernartoxford.org.uk
Preview: Friday 20 September 6.30 – 8.30pm
Modern Art Oxford
30 Pembroke Street Oxford OX1 1BP
Monday closed
Tuesday 11am – 6pm
Wednesday 11am – 6pm
Thursday 11am – 6pm
Friday 11am – 6pm
Saturday 11am – 6pm
Sunday 12pm – 5pm
Admission free