Monika Sprueth Philomene Magers
The Goldilocks Zone. Scheibitz's work addresses the relationship between painting and sculpture. He elaborates art-historical references, popular everyday phenomena and scientific findings using a reduced index of basic forms gathered from the known world - both within and beyond the scope of visual perception.
18 October 2008 marks the opening of Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers’ new space
in Berlin at Oranienburger Strasse.
Sculptures by Thomas Scheibitz will be shown in the main gallery, the second floor
space will feature works on paper by George Condo.
With their move to Berlin, Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers begin a new chapter in
their long-standing partnership. Monika Sprüth first opened her gallery in 1983 in
Cologne. The gallery programme developed around seminal discourses in art at that
time, most notably feminism as represented by Rosemarie Trockel, Cindy Sherman,
Barbara Kruger and Jenny Holzer.
In addition, Monika Sprüth showed conceptual artists such as Fischli/Weiss and
Louise Lawler, photographers Andreas Gursky and Thomas Demand and painters Andreas
Schulze, George Condo, Axel Kasseböhmer and Thomas Scheibitz. Many of whom have been
with the gallery for over 20 years.
Philomene Magers inaugurated her first gallery in 1991 in Cologne. Her focus lay
with older artists, whose influence on the generation of the 90’s was becoming
increasingly prominent: Donald Judd, Robert Morris, Dan Flavin, Ad Reinhardt, John
Baldessari, Richard Artschwager and Ed Ruscha. Her programme expanded further to
encompass the works of younger artists such as Sylvie Fleury and Karen Kilimnik.
Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers’ mutual interest in building their respective
galleries’ programmes around theoretical art discourse and maintaining an intense
conceptual exchange with participating artists evolved into a close relationship.
The programmes complemented each other and in the mid-90’s, Monika Sprüth and
Philomene Magers decided to merge their galleries. Cologne and Munich were to be the
locations. A Munich branch subsequently opened in 1998 and in order to promote new
talent, Sprüth Magers Projektraum was created in addition to the main Munich space.
As the global art market grew, a third gallery came into being in 2003, located in
the heart of Mayfair, London.
The move to Berlin is a natural progression with the city’s development into one of
the most important international centres for contemporary art.
The Gartenbau at Oranienburger Strasse, previously an old Resource-Clubs ballroom
and later a lecture hall affiliated to Humboldt University, will host the gallery’s
projects.
The opening of Monika Sprüth Philomene Magers will coincide with the inauguration of
SCHELLMANN SPRÜTH MAGERS ART PRODUCTION in the same building presenting an edition
by Jenny Holzer. Furthermore IMAGE MOVEMENT, a store for art films designed by
Rosemarie Trockel and Thea Djordjadze, will serve as the entrance to the edifice.
Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers are pleased to present 'The Goldilocks Zone' by
Thomas Scheibitz as the inaugural exhibition at the gallery’s new space in Berlin.
Thomas Scheibitz’s work addresses the relationship between painting and sculpture.
With no ‘prima maniera’, he elaborates art-historical references, popular everyday
phenomena and scientific findings using a reduced index of basic forms gathered from
the known world – both within and beyond the scope of visual perception. Abstract
thinking is thereby confronted with the intuitive logic and recognizable
similarities of the various forms and objects.
In this exhibition Thomas Scheibitz has devoted himself exclusively to sculpture and
the sculptural surface. A configuration of around thirty objects marks out the
exhibition space in a field-like arrangement and shows possible areas of interaction
between the autonomous sculpture, its arrangement in space and concepts such as
scale and proportion.
The sculptural composition within the gallery space is directly related to the title
of the exhibition. In astronomy, the ‘Goldilocks Zone’ describes a habitable zone of
space – an active region where the surface of every planet fulfils the minimal
conditions necessary for life. This zone can be calculated and explored using model
experiments. As opposed to the scientific concept, the title also alludes to a
popular English children’s story whose precise date of origin is unknown. The story
describes the behaviour of a young girl called Goldilocks when she finds herself
confronted with unfamiliar surroundings: she tries out the various options available
until she finds the objects and conditions that are ‘just right’ for her needs.
This structural approach informs Thomas Scheibitz’s strategy of pictorial invention
and can also be read as a metaphor for the artistic process. Scheibitz’s titles not
only form a link to the key aspects of his work, they also explore the regulating
and classifying dynamic that exists between word and artwork.
An artist’s book, 'The Goldilocks Zone', is being published in conjunction with the
exhibition. Featuring black-and-white photographs by Thomas Scheibitz, it provides
insight into his studio practice and his method of creating paintings and sculptures
in parallel. Constellations of paintings and sculptures represented in the
two-dimensional plane of photography are a new focal point of Thomas Scheibitz’s
work. The juxtaposition of the two media in this way precludes any hierarchical
relationship between the individual elements; by establishing connections between
them it places both the autonomy of the objects and their function within a broader
context.
'The Goldilocks Zone' is Thomas Scheibitz’s second solo exhibition at Monika Sprüth
Philomene Magers. In 2005 he presented 'Der Tisch, der Ozean und das Beispiel' (The
Table, the Ocean and the Example) in the German pavilion at the Venice Biennale. His
most recent solo exhibition, entitled 'about 90 elements / TOD IM DSCHUNGEL', was
shown at the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, Camden Arts Centre, London and the
Musée d’Art Moderne, Luxemburg in 2007/2008. Thomas Scheibitz was born in Radeberg
in 1968. He lives and works in Berlin.
Opening: Saturday, 18 October, 6 - 9 pm
Monika Sprueth Philomene Magers
Oranienburger Str. 18 - Berlin
Gallery hours: Tue – Sat 11 am – 6 pm
Free admission