Schleiffert portrays human role playing: the confrontation between men and women, rich and poor, weak and strong. Her exhibition is densely populated. Pop stars, pin-ups and personally made-up heroes and heroines appear, side by side with guerrilla warriors and heroin prostitutes. Schleiffert's stunning style supports the themes of power and lust, seduction and doom.
Say the name Charlotte Schleiffert and lightning starts to flash. Her work
distinguishes itself by an unprecedented fierceness of colour, form and
theme. From February 28 until May 9 the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
presents the first museum solo exhibition by this Rotterdam-based femme
fatale of the art world, who is establishing an international reputation.
The generous selection of her monumental drawings and paintings at the
museum is accompanied by a richly illustrated monograph.
Charlotte Schleiffert (Tilburg, 1967) graduated over ten years ago in 's
Hertogenbosch and continued her studies at the post-academic course
Ateliers '63 in Haarlem. She lives and works in Rotterdam, but never
continuously. Long journeys throughout Europe, the United States, Cuba,
Mexico, Thailand, Tibet and China serve to broaden her horizon. Her work
reflects her travels around the world and her life in the heart of the
city, as raw as it is sensual. In 1999 she received the first prize at the
Prix de Rome for painting.
Schleiffert portrays human role playing: the confrontation between men and
women, rich and poor, weak and strong. Her exhibition is densely
populated. Pop stars, pin-ups and personally made-up heroes and heroines
appear, side by side with guerrilla warriors and heroin prostitutes.
Schleiffert's stunning style supports the themes of power and lust,
seduction and doom.
Glamour and the gutter
Fantasy and reality meet in a penetrating way. Schleiffert paints crosses
of people she meets on the street with celebrities from TV or pictures in
newspapers, magazines and books. 'The society of pictures opens up like a
puppet show, in which Punch and Judy's guests have been made up and
spotlighted by Schleiffert', writes Wilma Suto, curator of the
Stadscollectie Rotterdam, in the book accompanying the exhibition.
'Suddenly a hard black shadow falls across the face of sex bomb Pamela
Anderson, as if her features have been marked by the nightlife of the
prostitutes who solicit in the street near Schleiffert's studio in
Rotterdam. The artist intermixes life in the gutter with the glamour of an
idol's existence.'
Feel no shame
FEEL NO SHAME, Schleiffert prints on one of her paintings in 1999; FEEL NO
PAIN on another canvas from that same year. These lines could be her
personal motto. They form a refrain that resounds throughout all her work.
Schleiffert steps up the lust for life. Her assertive figures, mostly
women, exude hot voluptuousness, along with a merciless thirst for blood.
They expose themselves in trials of strength with each other and with the
public. They are 'survivors', as Schleiffert says, warriors in the
struggle for life. At the same time they are stand-ins: grotesque types
that reflect the role playing in the mass media. And caricature it.
Countless press photographs form the source of Schleiffert's work: she
searches for the life behind the print, and drags it out from behind it.
As if keeping a personal check on the media, the artist travels around the
world and reshapes the documentary images into her own work.
Thus, Schleiffert positions the art of painting in the world of today. She
expands the medium through a free, sculptural application of techniques on
canvases of phenomenal size. Furthermore, the direct interplay with
current events, that correction of the mechanized view of the world, gives
her paintings an urgent dynamism. Not for nothing does Xandra Schutte,
cultural critic and chief editor of the weekly newspaper Vrij Nederland,
state in the monograph: 'Schleiffert's work is seething, alive and on
fire.'
(Charlotte Schleiffert, Feel no shame, NAi Publishers, design by 75B, 112
pages)
Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
Museumpark 18 - 20
3015 CX Rotterdam
tel.: + 31 (0) 10 44 19 475
Fax.: + 31 (0) 10 43 60 500