The Audience in Motion
The Audience in Motion
Sigmar Polke has already received numerous prizes and is currently the recipient of
a further prestigous award to now call his own. The artist is the eleventh Rubens
laureate of the City of Siegen, which places him amongst some of the greatest
painters of our time such as Morandi, Bacon, Twombly, Geiger, Freud and others.
Polke doesn't really require any introduction. His dot matrices are his landmark
trait, but as a whole his work incorporates infintely more. The artist restlessly
experiments with motifs, picture surfaces and materials. This fact is amply on
display in his current exhibition in the Musem of Contemporary Art Siegen which
features works that introduce a new element, the method of lenticular printing. The
works' surfaces are transparent and undulated, causing the infalling light to break.
This effect animates the viewer to stay in motion so as to be able to see different
images according to the angle from which a picture is viewed. Polke is presenting
over 80 works in the Siegen exhibition, 30 of which are new works utilizing the
lenticular method and are to be seen for the first time ever.
Siegen is a small city between Frankfurt and Cologne in Germany in which the famous
baroque painter Rubens was born. The award, which was named after Rubens, has been
presented every five years since 1957 to a living european painter for his or her
life's work. Parallel to the Polke exhibition 100 works from the previous ten Rubens
laureates in the Lambrecht-Schadeberg Collection will be on extensive display.
The Museum of Contemporary Art Siegen was founded six years ago and has been
directed by Dr. Eva Schmidt for the past two years.
The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue with essays by Charles W. Haxthausen
and Dr. Eva Schmidt and will be published by the Dumont Verlag.
Museum fur Gegenwartskunst
Unteres Schloss 1 - Siegen