Monika Spruth Philomene Magers
Letter
Letter
Monika Spruth and Philomene Magers are pleased to present the first solo
exhibition of Zbigniew Rogalski at the gallery of Spruth Magers Projekte.
The exhibition consists of ten new pictures in oil on canvas that Rogalski (born
1974) has grouped together under the title of Letter. The word ‘Letter’ for him
symbolises communication and interaction between people. In an extended meaning it
refers to interpersonal relations of a more general nature, to friendship and
relationship. The pictures in the exhibition touch on this theme more or less
explicitly.
The pictures are very heterogeneous. Here, Rogalski is deliberately trying out the
different possibilities of presentation. Broadly speaking, they can be broken down
into the following topics: a portrait, some stellar constellations, close-ups of
faces, landscapes and a flag.
There are three small-sized pictures (constellations) of stellar
constellations. White colour on black ground depicts the Great Bear and the Small
Bear and also a fictive stellar composition: Constellation (Two Trains).
It is a seemingly harmless picture, yet the title points to a macabre interpretation
of the zig-zagging line: Instinctively the viewer thinks of a rail accident in which
the coaches of the train have piled into each other and appear from an aerial
perspective to be folded together.
Then there is a classical portrait, Untitled, a female half-figure
depicted from the side with a towel wrapped around her head, creating a stylised
turban.
Other pictures that serve as examples of his art are Closer (boy) and
Closer (girl): Both of them are in larger format and show a face in a
lying position, fragmented as if divided into facets.
All of these so differently interpreted pictures deal with the subject of the visual
angle. Rogalski’s constant point of departure is that there is no stable image of
reality - that painting is an area of space parallel to reality, one in which the
painter can play out ad infinitum the meanings of the visible world’s surface.
In pursuing this strategy, Rogalski finds himself in the tradition of Cezanne with
his almost-scientific attempt to prove in his paintings that the world is based on
geometric bodies, just as the Manierist movement experimented with new vantage
points at a time when the invention of optical instruments shattered the
mathematically calculated image of the world promoted by the Renaissance.
Stellar constellations are visible and real images that all of us can make out in
the sky. If, at the very least, we have identified the Great Bear, why shouldn’t
there be Two Trains up there in the heavens as well?
In any case, stellar constellations are no more than images that are visible to a
greater or lesser degree depending on weather conditions; they are never actually
tangible. What’s more, for the lay-person astronomy is not so far removed from
astrology. Might the constellation of the Two Trains be pointing to a stroke of fate
predicted by the stars?
Rogalski makes use of the associative power of certain images, the double meaning of
things, applying them to the stories he tells. His pictures are visual plots that
live off the pictorial simplicity and narrative density he paints. The portrait of
the woman with the turban against a black background depicts an intimate moment,
like that of having just taken a shower or a bath. However, the turban is very
dominant, and Rogalski himself feels challenged by the picture to ask the question:
What do we (Europeans) actually feel when we see a turban?
Closer (boy) and Closer (girl) form a couple. The pictures
are deceptively similar, the titles differentiated by gender. Yet the images do not
support this. Here, the look is one of intimacy. When one comes so close to a face
that the eyes cannot fix on it anymore, it becomes blurred. In such a case, the
distinction between male and female is no longer possible. All that counts is the
beloved one (lying) opposite who does not become clearer the closer one gets but
rather dissolves into nothingness.
All the pictures (except for the one entitled Flag, a sort of
cross between the Polish and German national flags) have been painted in
black, white and shades of grey. The depiction is for the most part reduced to its
essentials. Frequently it takes the title to explain what is to be seen - or rather,
what might be seen: Car in the night shows two white dots in a black
monochrome setting - the headlights beaming in the darkness.
The interplay of representation, title and associations of the viewer, which could
also be regarded as prescient pictures, brings forth a multitude of narrative
moments. The pictures do not tell a story, no more than they offer snapshots.
Instead, they create places for stories. The routes to these Topoi are as manifold
as the angles the viewer may wish to take.
Zbigniew Rogalski was born to 24.07.1974 in Dabrowa, Bialystok (Poland). 1999 he
graduated from the academy of arts in Poznan. He lives and works in Warsaw. Rogalski
belongs to the most interesting newcomers of the Polish art scene.
Spruth Magers Projekte
Ludwigstr. 7 - Munich
Opening hours: Tu-F: 11am-2pm; 3pm-6pm, Sat: 11am-2pm and by appointment