Monika Spruth Philomene Magers
"Un soir, j'ai assis la beaute' sur mes genoux. And I found her bitter and I hurt her". Having realized several exhibition projects together in the past, the two artists seek each time to address concerns about the processes of artistic creation, questioning the freedoms and limitations it entails. Playing with the scale and vitrine like qualities of the front gallery the first installation is deliberately oversized so it makes the space look too small for the exhibition.
"Un soir, j'ai assis la beaute' sur mes genoux. And I found her bitter and I hurt her"
Monika Spruth and Philomene Magers are delighted to announce the exhibition
"Un soir, j'ai assis la beautè sur mes genoux. And I found her bitter
and I hurt her" a collaboration between Thea Djordjadze and Rosemarie Trockel
made especially for the gallery's London space.
Having realized several exhibition projects together in the past, the two artists
seek each time to address concerns about the processes of artistic creation,
questioning the freedoms and limitations it entails. Drawing the title of the
exhibition from Arthur Rimbaud's poem "La Saison en Enfer" the
artists equally challenge and subvert our expectations of art - what we think
it should provide and the promise of beauty we often expect it to entail.
Playing with the scale and vitrine like qualities of the front gallery the first
installation is deliberately oversized so it makes the space look too small for the
exhibition. Placed in such a way that the virtually monochrome canvases seemingly
float on water with their surfaces reflected against the black painted gallery, the
elements of the construction overwhelm and simultaneously dissolve into the
background so the whole work itself almost eludes the viewer.
In the rear space suspended neon tubes and chords form a framework for the second
installation. Central to this are four urns containing some of the ashes of
sculptures which the artists had jointly created and then destroyed by fire in a
specific location along the banks of the Rhine. Photographs and an accompanying film
document this process. The original sculptures, human like in form, had been given
certain attributes such as those of the poet or the artist represented by heavy geometric structures that always
threatened to overburden them. Having found an idyllic parcel of land overlooking
the city of Kassel, a city rich with German art historical significance, the artists
proceeded to bury these ashes, some of which are contained by the urns in the
gallery. In a gesture of ritualistic destruction and transformation the sculptures
are returned to the earth to a point where they will break down no more.
In a distinguished career which is deeply rooted in the Cologne art scene from the
early 1980&'s onwards , Rosemarie Trockel has been the subject of numerous solo
exhibitions, amongst which the Moderne Museet, Stockholm; the Dia Center for the
Arts, New York; Whitechapel Art Gallery, London and the Centre Georges Pompidou,
Paris. In 2004 she received the prestigious Wolfgang-Hahn-Preis which led to the
solo exhibition `Post-Menopause` at the Museum Ludwig in Cologne and the Museo
Nazionale Delle Arti Del XXI Secolo in Rome. Trockel represented Germany in the 1999
Venice Biennale.
Born in Georgia, Thea Djordjadze now lives and works in Cologne. She studied under
Rosemarie Trockel at the Kunstakademie Dusseldorf and was a founder member of
the art collective hobbypopMUSEUM. With a practice encompassing performance,
painting, drawing, sculpture and installation, her work was most recently seen in
London at Studio Voltaire. Previous collaborations between the two artists have
taken place at the Venice Biennial 2003, the Neue Kunst Halle St Gallen 2006 and the
Lyon Biennial 2007.
Opening: Monday, October 8, 2007, 6-8pm
Monika Spruth Philomene Magers London
7/A Grafton Street - London
Free admission