Four Positions Facing Utopia. Paintings. Lina Jabbour, Peter Ruehle, Torsten Ruehle, Stephen Wilks take us on a journey inwards, towards promised lands, when the promises of the stock market seem to fail.
Lina Jabbour
Peter Ruehle
Torsten Ruehle
Stephen Wilks
Four painters are on display at Kai Hilgemann's first show in 2008. To mark
the season, they take us on a journey inwards, towards promised lands, when
the promises of the stock market seem to fail.
The reduced and delicately composed skylines of todays cities of PETER
RUEHLE (*1975 in Dresden) speak of Alphaville and dreamscapes of familiar
towns. His approach to our modern world is departure, distance. Observation
and recreation from afar.
French artist LINA JABBOUR (*1973 in Beirut) similarly encircles her
subject, yet closer. Rocks, icebergs and clouds emerge as shells for new
inhabitants, a new man. Shaping his world into form regardless of the insect
and the mountain. Jabbour's art of drawing pierces precisely through the
core of our vulnerability and our aim of its overcoming.
The final utopian journey inward is provided by TORSTEN RUEHLE's (*1975 in
Dresden) architectural home interiors and arrangements. Still lifes. Yet his
oilpaintings resemble rather filmstills of imaginative movies. While
portraying beauty, bloodlessness and desaster advertise on the surface of
archieved settlement. And what is this creepy little thing doing there?
Stephen Wilks (*1964 in GB) is a master of the animal world where pigs
lounge in thrones wearing pin stripe suits while sauntering on the canale
grande or beeing carried down Friedrichstrasse on the shoulders of men. The
journey inward is completed as man is facing the animal inside. Based on the
failed utopia of Orwell's Animal Farm Stephen Wilks takes from us one ideal.
But he provides us with another tool: A grim sense of humour.
opening february 8, 2008
Gallery Kai Hilgemann
Zimmerstrasse 90/91- Berlin
Free admission