Neue Nationalgalerie
Berlin
Potsdamer Strasse 50
+49 (0)30 2663660 FAX +49 (0)30 2662161
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Thomas Demand
dal 15/9/2009 al 16/1/2010
Tue-Wed 10 am-6 pm Thur 10 am-10 pm Fri-Sat 10 am - 8 pm Sun 10 am-6 pm

Segnalato da

Katharina von Chlebowski


approfondimenti

Neue Nationalgalerie



 
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15/9/2009

Thomas Demand

Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin

The approximately 40 works on display, which include new pieces, deal with social and historical events since 1945 and their background. However, Demand's pictures do not merely bear reference to exceptional moments in history. Alongside momentous political and societal events and instantly recognizable scenes, the show includes works which depict the private and incidental, but which represent equally a kaleidoscopic part of a particular time and society. Demand is not a photographer in the classical sense, but rather someone who documents our various media worlds and is both a reproducer and an illusionist.


comunicato stampa

Thomas Demand, one of the most influential and pioneering artists of our day, will present an extensive solo show at the Neue Nationalgalerie from September 2009. While he has had major exhibitions dedicated to his work in such cities as London, New York and Zurich, the show in Berlin will be his largest presentation in Germany to date. Entitled Nationalgalerie (National Gallery), the exhibition is not, however, a general retrospective of his work up to now, rather it is purposefully dedicated to one theme in particular – perhaps the most important in all of Demand’s richly diverse body of work: Germany. Correspondingly, the exhibition coincides with the anniversaries of two pivotal historical events in German history: the foundation of the Federal Republic of Germany 60 years ago and the fall of the Berlin Wall 20 years ago.

The approximately 40 works on display, which include new, previously unshown pieces, deal with social and historical events since 1945 and their immediate background. However, Demand’s pictures do not merely bear reference to exceptional moments in history. Alongside momentous political and societal events and instantly recognizable scenes, the exhibition includes works which depict the private and incidental, but which represent equally a kaleidoscopic part of a particular time and society.

Photography is the medium in which Thomas Demand’s works are preserved and exhibited, but his working methods transcend this medium. The artist often finds his subjects in the mass media using them as the starting point to (re)create a particular spatial situation as paper sculptures, which are then made into a two-dimensional image with the use of a large format camera and meticulous attention to detail. In a conceptual sense, Thomas Demand is a sculptor as much as he is a photographer. Specific traces of the reproduced incident are systematically erased from the three- dimensional, life-size reconstructions; and so too are the people present in the original photographs. What remains are phantom images of ‘crime scenes’ of missing events which often appear just as familiar to us as they are impalpable. Thomas Demand's works will be accompanied by captions written for the exhibition by Botho Strauß (b. 1944 in Naumburg). These texts are by no means intended to explain the images, nor to limit their scope in any way, but rather to add further layers and, as a result of their autonomy, new readings.

Thomas Demand’s works draw our attention to our reception of visual media and to their influence on the structures of our memory. The exhibition Nationalgalerie gives rise to questions about whether and to what extent a society’s appearance is condensed and concentrated in individual key images as well as being retained in people’s minds and remembered through such key images. Demand’s reconstructive handling of images that carry significance or appear to carry significance, focuses on the conscious or unconscious self-portrayal of a society and its changes. There could hardly be a more fitting place for an exhibition which offers us a panorama of a nation’s history than the great glass hall of the Neue Nationalgalerie of Mies van der Rohe. The building is not only an incunabulum of post-war architecture, but also equally historically significant as a symbol of the way the Federal Republic of Germany viewed itself at the former inner-city border. The magnificent exhibition design by the London-based architects Caruso St John, forms an ideal connection between Demand’s works and the light hall of Mies van der Rohe.

Press contact
Dr. Katharina von Chlebowski
Theresa Lucius
T +49 30 26394880 F +49 30 263948811 presse@demandinberlin.org

Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
Generaldirektion
Stauffenbergstraße 41 10785 Berlin

Mechtild Kronenberg
Presse, Kommunikation, Sponsoring kommunikation@smb.spk-berlin.de
http://www.smb.museum

Anne Schäfer-Junker
Presse presse@smb.spk-berlin.de T +49 30 266 42 34 02 F +49 30 266 42 34 09

Press conference: Wednesday, 16 September 2009, beginning 11:00 a.m.

Neue Nationalgalerie
Potsdamer Straße 50 10785 Berlin
Opening Hours: Tue – Wed 10 am – 6 pm, Thur 10 am – 10 pm, Fri – Sat 10 am - 8 pm, Sun 10 am – 6 pm
Monday closed
Admission: Regular 8 Euro, Concession 4 Euro

IN ARCHIVIO [30]
The Collection Part 3
dal 6/11/2014 al 30/12/2014

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