Monika Sprueth Philomene Magers
Des bien ich. The central piece of the exhibition is the "Bienenmann" ("the bee-man"): Dressed in a bee keeper's suit and shoes he sits upright against the gallery wall, while an old beehive covers his head. Two owls and two rabbits complete the symmetrical composition.
Monika Spruth and Philomene Magers are delighted to present the first solo
exhibition of Robert Elfgen at their gallery in Cologne. After his studies at the
Academy of Arts in Braunschweig (class of John Armleder) and at the Academy of Arts
in Dusseldorf (class of Rosemarie Trockel), the artist realized solo
exhibitions in Cologne (Simultanhalle), London (Westlondonprojects) and in Munich
(Spruth Magers Projects) as well as projects in public spaces. Robert Elfgen
received the Peter-Mertes-Stipendium of the Bonner Kunstfonds, the studio
scholarship of the Bonner Kunstverein and the award of the federal state NRW for
young artists. Robert Elfgen lives and works in Cologne.
"If the bee disappeared from the face of the earth, mankind would survive four
more years; no bees, no pollination, no animals, no humans"
Albert Einstein describes the ostensibly innocuous role that the small insect plays
in our ecosystem as a defining paradigm of our existence. Robert Elfgen's solo
show in Cologne "des bien ich" ("this is me, bee") follows
this thread and presents the "Bien" ("bee"/"to
be") as a metaphor for the relentlessly recurring questions of being.
The central piece of the exhibition is the "Bienenmann" ("the
bee-man"): Dressed in a bee keeper's suit and shoes he sits upright
against the gallery wall, while an old beehive covers his head. Two large format
tarsia works on either side of him show two facing and mutually mirroring greyhounds
posed as guards. Two owls and two rabbits complete the symmetrical composition. The
effect refers the objects to each other as well as to themselves: like two facing
mirrors they reveal an abysmal infinity in an articulation of the beginning and end
of all things.
The gallery's walls are populated by bees. Variations of different bee swarm
formations modulate the surfaces of changing images with colours that alternate in
accordance with the light. The visually seductive effect of these various color-ways
and the geometric structure seem to lend a third dimension to the two-dimensional
works. Like a window unraveling a new perspective, an abstract landscape takes shape
which references the schematic perception of bees.
The illusion of unlimited space is further enhanced by the installation of
abstracted beehives that are hung at different heights from the gallery ceiling.
White plastic barrels on the floor and alternating color surfaces simulate leaking
paint. Emotionally charged titles turn the splurges into the feelings and affections
that have defined life ever since.
The abstraction of the bee-world leads to substantial questions that not only drive
the motor of creative processes in the fine arts but epitomize the omnipresent
striving for perfection and harmony. As progressive and far developed as our world
seems today, the perfection of a bee colony and of nature remains unachieved. The
"Bien" describes a colony of hundreds of insects as one unit, whose
general functionality compares to the organism of a mammal. The title "des
bien ich" prompts the viewer to consider the bigger contexts of our contrived
world back to the microcosm of the sum and the swarm of aspects of our existence.
"des bien ich" - what exactly? And how many?
Opening: Wednesday, 16 April, 7-9pm
Monika Sprueth Philomene Magers Cologne
Wormser Straße 23 D-50661 Cologne
Opening hours:
Tuesday - Friday, 10am - 1pm and 3pm - 6pm;
Saturday 11am - 4pm and by appointment
Free admission