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Paul Albert Leitner
dal 8/7/2007 al 27/8/2007

Segnalato da

Katharina Murschetz



 
calendario eventi  :: 




8/7/2007

Paul Albert Leitner

Kunsthalle Wien, Wien

Portraits of Artists and Other People, Self-portraits and Nature. The artist keeps a travel journal in the medium of photography, recording the transformations he undergoes in the course of his voyage through life. Curated by Sabine Folie.


comunicato stampa

Portraits of Artists and Other People, Self-portraits and Nature

Curated by Sabine Folie

The “picture” comes into being beforehand, in my imagination, and takes shape within its setting before the shot is actually staged. “Setting” means not necessarily the specific location where I meet the person, but rather the broader ambience of that location. Sometimes there are clichéd backgrounds like a terrace with a view or a twilight mood.
Paul Albert Leitner

Paul Albert Leitner keeps a travel journal in the medium of photography, recording the transformations he undergoes in the course of his voyage through life. Entirely in the tradition of Lawrence Sterne’s Sentimental Journey through France and Italy (1768) and the many subsequent novels of personal development through travel, the artist sets off (as a young man) on a journey into his own self. His perception passes through the autobiographical form of his outer, physical existence, juxtaposed in diptych form with nature as a mirror of the soul.
Since the advent of ethnographic study, journeys of this kind no longer exist, as Claude Levi-Strauss grumbles in Tristes Tropiques (1955): “Journeys, those magic caskets full of dreamlike promises, will never again yield up their treasures untarnished. A proliferating and overexcited civilization has broken the silence of the seas once and for all. The perfumes of the tropics and the pristine freshness of human beings have been corrupted by a busyness with dubious implications, which mortifies our desires and dooms us to acquire only contaminated memories.”
This knowledge of the impossibility of innocence and the nostalgic is combined with poetic-documentary staging of reality and the construction of fictional figures, based either on himself or on others. There is no place for sentimentality: the logic of globalism stands in stark contrast to the cracked self, as if the latter were a relic from bygone times – whether jovial, stiffly suited, or soft and vulnerable in a state of semi-undress: for this is how the artist’s personae present themselves in his self-portraits.
The artist’s pedantry in his choice of colors, of subject matter, of framing, of the formal and compositional qualities obscure any emotional involvement. If there is any such involvement at all, then it is twisted into the comical, with the ironic distance of quotation, be it David’s Death of Marat (1793), Tischbein’s Goethe in the Roman Campagna (1787), Mantegna’s foreshortened Dead Christ (1480) or a laurel-wreathed Dante in elegiac profile. “Parody,” we are told by the scholar of the comical, Wilhelm Fraenger, “jokingly keeps the elaborate, noble forms of the mocked original, but intersperses them here and there with trivial details.“ The echoes of the original are more or less evident, but mostly knocked off their sublime pedestal into the trivially human or the nostalgically elegiac – as in the many scenes where the protagonist lies stretched out corpse-like on a bed.
Perhaps only music is truly nostalgic – the music of bygone times which accompanies the artist and his pictures as a resonator of memory and as the filling of a theatrical space that almost becomes cinematic. It offers comforting fatigue, and now and then maybe a little ecstasy...

Paul Albert Leitner (born 1957 in Jenbach, Tyrol) has been working for nearly three decades on a photographic oeuvre including still lifes, landscapes, portraits, and slide-sound collages. At the Kunsthalle Wien project space, he is showing a series of 240 slides, projected in three rooms: Portraits of Artists, Other People, and Self-portraits and Nature.

Catalogue: In occasion of the exhibition a catalogue will be published in German/English, containing interviews conducted by Gerald Matt with Paul Albert Leitner and an essay by Sabine Folie.

Information and image material: Katharina Murschetz, KUNSTHALLE wien, Office: Museumsplatz 1, A-1070 Vienna Tel.: +43 1 521 891221, Fax: +43 1 521 891217, e-Mail: presse@kunsthallewien.at

Opening: Monday, July 9, 2007, 7 pm

KUNSTHALLE wien
Museumsplatz 1, A-1070 Vienna
Tuesday through Saturday: 4 pm–midnight, Sunday and Monday: 1 pm – 7 pm

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