Nicolas Krupp Contemporary Art
The artist produces large sculptures using simple materials like plywood, chipboard and roof slats. These he paints with rapid, adept strokes of the brush to make them look like wood or stone.
Markus Müller produces large sculptures using simple materials like plywood, chipboard and
roof slats. These he paints with rapid, adept strokes of the brush to make them look like
wood or stone. The resulting illusion influences our perception of the weight, density and
value of his constructions, generating a tension between the impact of this works and the
materials out of which they are actually made.
We are confronted with elements from nature like branches, stones or bones, most of them just
slightly larger than life; with structures that show a certain kinship with pieces of furniture or
fragments of architecture; and with hybrid objects that bridge nature and culture. The works
often refer to art itself and the context of its presentation.
Markus Müller takes a playful approach to artistic principles of design, referring to the styles
and epochs of art history. His works also incorporate the ideas that have emerged from his
study of sculpture. He elevates his depictions of natural elements to works of art through
their form of presentation and has created a nonfigurative sculpture that appears to be
natural. In so doing, he raises questions about the criteria that define a found object as
sculpture while also inquiring into the status of the objects he represents, specifically their
position within the laws that govern art.
Opening: Tuesday 8 January 2013, 6 pm
Nicolas Krupp
Erlenstrasse 15, Basel
Hours: Open from Thursday to Saturday from 2 to 6 pm
Free Admission