Spruth Magers
Berlin
Oranienburger Str. 18
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David Maljkovic / Jean-Luc Mylayne
dal 27/6/2012 al 26/8/2012
Tues-Sat 11am-6pm

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27/6/2012

David Maljkovic / Jean-Luc Mylayne

Spruth Magers, Berlin

The installation A Long Day for the Form by Maljkovic consists of a large studio reflector panel lit by a single spotlight. The sculptural structure demonstrates the artist's use of avante garde architecture and design as a constant point of reference. Jean-Luc Mylayne brings together selected photographic works created between 1991 and 2008.


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David Maljkovic
A Long Day for the Form

Sprüth Magers Berlin is delighted to present an exhibition by Croatian artist David Maljković, featuring two sound installations and an accompanying series of prints. In his second solo show at the Berlin gallery, the artist examines the very condition of a given exhibition by ridding the project of content and isolating the set-up itself through a meta-installation of ‘displays’.

A Long Day for the Form showcases David Maljković´s current body of work, in which he gives his own artistic practise a radical restaging, an approach recently explored in shows at Kunsthalle, Basel, Sculpture Centre, New York and Seccession, Vienna. Objects developed as presentation structures for other contexts and contents have been cleared out, emptied and arranged in the gallery as isolated sculptural objects and architectural structures, while small interventions by the artist such as sound and light serve to recall the presence of missing works. By concentrating on these various forms of display, Maljković focuses attention on his own artistic strategies and experiences as well as addressing the act of exhibiting itself.

The installation A Long Day for the Form (2012) consists of a large studio reflector panel lit by a single spotlight. Reflected light is directed onto an elevated architectural element, constructed in the corner of the gallery, from which the sound of chirping crickets can be heard. The sculptural structure demonstrates the artist’s use of avante garde architecture and design as a constant point of reference. The monotonous sound of the crickets activates and enlivens the space, but at the same time evokes memories of long, hot, exhausting summer days. The installation opens up contradicting temporalities, a central concern in David Maljković´s work; on the one hand the display structure may have been emptied of artworks; on the other hand, the projector and empty walls represent the possibility of a future presentation. The installation can thus be read both as a symbol of the absent past or of a history yet to be materialized, or a future that may never arrive.

David Maljković works with the gallery space, modifying the view and architectural parameteres by building elements into the room. A specially built suspended ceiling has been constructed at the far end of the gallery, housing a set of speakers, and a spotlight is positioned outside the window. The architectural intervention blocks the expansive gallery window, disruptuting the scenic space and the peaceful environment the sound of the crickets and the light from the window initially generates.
Through consideration of the gallery’s architecture, Maljković´s works engage with the space and thoroughly transform it’s expression.

The exhibition will also include a series of prints in three parts, featuring a snapshot of a tired art handler at the Vjenceslav Richter Collection in Maljković’s native town of Zagreb, Croatia. The work makes reference to one of the artist’s films Images with their own shadows (2008). Maljković merges the photographs with an impression of the projection device used for the original installation. By displaying the three prints vertically, like a column, the artist establishes an architectural element to the series.


David Maljković lives and works between Zagreb and Berlin. Recent exhibitions include Kunsthalle Basel (with Latifa Echakhch, 2012), Sculpture Center, New York (with Lucy Skaer, 2012), Secession, Vienna (2011-2012), Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid (2009), Kunstverein Hamburg (2007) and P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, New York (2007). Recent group exhibitions include La Triennale, Paris (2012), Bucharest Biennale 5 (2012), Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow (2011 -2012), Arnolfini, Bristol (2011), Centre Pompidou, Paris (2011), Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Castilla y León (2011) and the 29th Bienal de São Paulo (2010). In 2009 David Maljković was awarded the ARCO Prize for Young Artists in Madrid, followed by the International Contemporary Art Prize Diputació de Castelló in 2010. Forthcoming solo exhibitions include a major survey exhibition at Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven in 2012, and at Baltic Center for Contemporary Art, Gateshead, UK in 2013.

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Jean-Luc Mylayne

Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers are pleased to present a solo exhibition by Jean-Luc Mylayne for the first time in Berlin. In his exhibition, the French artist brings together selected photographic works created between 1991 and 2008.

Jean-Luc Mylayne has remained unremittingly interested in philosophical issues which examine the concept of existence and the experience of time. Proceeding from his activities as a philosopher and poet, he pursues in his artistic work, through the medium of photography, investigations in which he focuses on the motif of birds living in the wild as a metaphor for his philosophical research. In a time-consuming procedure, now having lasted more than thirty-five years, on journeys through the entire European continent as well as in America, the artist has observed songbirds such as sparrows, thrushes, and wrens. He shows them in secluded wilderness settings as well as in proximity to rural settlements and agricultural operations, which he considers to be sites of the transition between civilization and nature. Besides areas in his native country of France, Mylayne has spent extended periods of time shooting his pictures in Santa Fe, New Mexico and in Fort Davis, Texas. His nomadic way of life is based on comprehensive research with respect to the habitats of these animals and, like a natural scientist, he comes back to the same places again and again. Some aspects of Mylayne's working mode are the exploration of the terrain, the establishment of the photographic setting, the period during which the birds get used to the new situation, and the alert waiting over a period of several months. As a patient observer, Mylayne builds up a trusting relationship to the animals and immerses himself without interventions in the world which he is investigating until finally, at a moment determined by him beforehand, he records it. In contrast to the photographer of wild animals, who searches for spectacular views, Mylayne's goal is the production of an autonomous image which represents and stores the instant when the picture is taken as a temporal continuum. The work titles likewise emphasize the importance of the passage of time: They consist of an ongoing enumeration and an indication of the months during which the pictures were created. Most of the time, Mylayne produces his photographs as single copies, and they become part of a longtime pictorial archive in which the individual works stand in relation to each other.

In his solo exhibition, Mylayne is presenting works which, through changing lines of vision onto nature, give rise to various levels for perceiving time. In a series of photographs, Mylayne focuses intensively on the reconstruction of observation as a temporal movement. In these pictures, he often presents the birds, not at the center, but as tiny figures within the landscape. They are cut off by the frame, appear blurred, or have already flown away from the pictorial segment. Mylayne sets the horizon of the landscape very low, so that the sky becomes the dominant background. He repeats a view leading from the ground to a high altitude, just like the flying motion of the birds. In the photographs No. 268, No. 269, and No. 270, all of which were created between February and March 2004, he shows three successively altered views of the same tree. In the photographs, there are respective modifications in the perspectives of a bird sitting on a branch, in the exposure to light, and in the color of the sky, until the tree in the foreground of No. 270 is no longer in focus, and only diffuse shadows indicate the presence of the bird. The pictures acquire the quality of stills which, as individual images, evoke a filmic succession or an ongoing pictorial sequence. In a subtle fashion, as in No. 284, Février - Mars 2004, Mylayne ushers into recognizability in the background such traces and equipment of human beings as a fence, a wood saw, or a windwheel. The indication of human presence sets in motion a dynamic oscillation between presence and absence which is repeated in the constantly changing positions of the animals. As in a puzzle picture, the viewer is required to reconstruct Mylayne's scenes and can recognize the birds with a groping, gliding gaze only after a certain time.

In addition to photographs which concentrate on the temporal progression of observation, Mylayne also creates contrasting works such as No. 443, Avril - Mai 2007 in which the birds are at the center of the pictorial segment. He shows them in close-ups as single figures recorded in front of a landscape which has become an abstract background. The animals often turn their backs to the viewer and thereby extend his own view onto nature. In these photographs, Mylayne activates an introspective view of the world and requires from the observer a self-reflective standpoint. The abstraction of the forms of nature plays an important role here and is achieved through special lenses which he himself constructs and inserts into the large-format camera. With them, he can calibrate the impression of the depth of the landscape according to his needs, and can focus on selected points and elements of the pictorial background with varying degrees of sharpness. Just as a painter composes his picture, so does Mylayne utilize blurriness, colors, and relationships of light in his photographs so as to introduce into the technical medium of photography an aspect of personal handwriting and subjective decision. In an experimental manner, he disrupts reality with abstract forms and lines of light and shadow which he finds preexisting in nature, and he depicts them as visual processes which further influence the temporal expression of his mise-en-scènes.

The approach to abstraction and to the stylistic means of painting is likewise apparent in Mylayne's use of the diptych and triptych, the original format of the meditative image. The multiparty structure allows Mylayne to intensify the duration of contemplation and the variable perspectives within his pictures. In the oldest work of the exhibition, No. 105, Septembre - Décembre 1991, he transferred a photograph into an eight-part, mirrored montage. Like a Rorschach test, the vegetation evolves into abstract ornamentation, and the delicate bird remains the sole point of orientation for the viewer's point of view. Mylayne's pictures are characterized by a contemplative impact which, in the complex mirroring of No. 105, gives rise to an internalized perception of nature. Though intimate, meditative dialogues with the living environment of birds, Mylayne attains a visual realization of time in his pictures and constantly raises universal questions concerning existence and its transience.


Jean-Luc Mylayne was born in 1946 in France and he lives at various places throughout the world.
In 2010, he presented an extensive retrospective at the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid. In recent years, he has had solo exhibitions at the Musée d'art contemporain de Lyon (2009), at the Parrish Art Museum, Southampton, New York (2009), at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Cleveland (2008), at the Blaffer Gallery and at the Texas Gallery, Houston (2007). The Lannan Foundation in Santa Fe, New Mexico supported his residence at the Bernal ranch and presented an exhibition of his works in 2005. In 2004, Laurent Busin curated a presentation at the MAC, Grand Hornu, Belgium. In his native country of France, Mylayne's works were to be seen at large exhibitions such as at the Musée d'Art Moderne, Saint-Etienne (1991 and 1994), ARC/Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris (1995), Musée de l'Abbaye Sainte-Croix, Les Sables d'Olonne (1993), Musée Bonnat, Bayonne, "Le Carré" (1992), at the Biblithèque Nationale, Paris (1990), and at the Musée des Beaux-Arts, Calais (1989).

For more information, interviews, or images, please contact Roxana Pennie at Sutton PR:
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Opening reception: 28 June 2012, 6 - 9 pm<

Spruth Magers
Oranienburger Straße 18, D-10178 Berlin
Opening hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 11am-6pm
Admission: Free

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