Four Seasons
Four Seasons
This recent series of photographs shows arrangements of objects, from unusual
musical instruments to patterned textiles and an eccentric-looking bag. In inviting
us to contemplate the objects depicted and the various possibilities of presenting
and arranging them, the pictures quietly lead us to reflect on fine art photography
as a whole and its origins in the classical visual media.
Objects and genres frequently switch roles in Annette Kelm’s work. A trash-design,
80s-style watch case is presented with the slick panache of an advertising shot, but
still has an echo of the baroque memento mori. In a clear continuation of the
traditional still life with a musical instrument, we see the first electric guitar
in history against a backdrop of cheap cloth produced in Holland for sub-Saharan
markets. The large-format photographs of textile patterns, of green leaves or exotic
abstractions, on the other hand, are examples of archived and near-forgotten luxury
material designs in the style of Dorothy Draper, the designer whose blend of
neo-baroque, surrealism and modernism has been a driving force in US interior design
since the 1920s.
This kind of information on the cultural and historic relevance of the photographed
objects is not easily fathomed from the photographs themselves: Annette Kelm prefers
to give her pictures poetic titles like “Stars Look Back,” and the surprising
combinations of objects within a single work thwart simple interpretations and
categorizations. For instance, the controlling device of the Wurlitzer organ, the
“sound-machine” of early silent cinema, is seamed by a Miró print, a combination
that might even be read as a comment on bourgeois tastes in interior design. Which
object is presented in what way, and for what purpose? What combinations of objects
are imaginable or have so far not been imagined? The cowboy with a fan in his hand
and the mustachioed woman peering out of a slanted Renaissance house seem somehow
familiar. As Vanessa Joan Müller has indicated in an essay, the real meaning of
these photographs would appear to lie precisely in this interplay of differences and
repetitions.
Born in 1975, Annette Kelm studied art in Hamburg before moving to Berlin, where she
now lives and works. This September, she will take part in the Lyon Biennale of
Contemporary Art. A solo exhibition at the Wattis Institute in San Francisco is
planned for 2008. Samples of her work are currently on show at the Pump House
Gallery in London and the Shedhalle in Zurich. The catalogue Errors in English, with
texts by Sabeth Buchmann, Jessica Morgan and Michaela Meise, was published in 2006.
Opening: 7 September, 6 – 9 p.m.
Johann König, Berlin
Dessauer Str. 6-7 - Berlin
Free admission