Susanne Paesler
Pattern Recognition
25 Jan - 22 Feb 2020
SUSANNE PAESLER
Pattern Recognition
25 January – 22 February 2020
Galerie Barbara Weiss, Berlin, Germany
In cooperation with Tenzing Barshee
In matters of appearance
The paintings are abstract. Lines intersect and overlap to build grids. The compositions are neither calculations nor inventions. They’re based on simple observations, lifted.
These are fabric paintings. Transformed, cropped and copied patterns: argyle socks, checkered tablecloths, the Berlin U-Bahn’s camo. Paesler selected fabrics that reminded her of something.
They’re on the tip of our tongue, a blurred memory of a bourgeois jacket. There is an anecdote somewhere. Grotesque nostalgia for markers of class distinction.
The textile stands in for texture. Paesler responded to a demand for texture in painting. “Being creative,” Anni Albers argued, “is not so much the desire to do something as listening to that which wants to be done: the dictation of materials.” The textile prescribes the painting.
Paesler’s paint embellishes canvas, wood and most often, thin aluminum. Lacquer on metal like car paint, Minimal art’s hang-up on permanence. And Sherrie Levine’s chess and backgammon boards on lead.
As a technique, the pattern is a framing device that creates a limitless sequence of confined spaces. Like the fabric squares she works from, Paesler’s patterns are contained. She frames the framing device, dissects and brackets it.
“Allegorical imagery is appropriated imagery,” writes Craig Owens in Allegorical Impulse (1980), “the allegorist doesn’t invent images but confiscates them.” To copy an image is to double it. Tautologies.
Often translucent, one atop the other, Paesler’s lines are linked, concatenated (con = together + catenare = chained). Braids and chains and knitted loops are superimposed on plaid grids. Like Michelle Grabner’s paintings from crocheted blankets—subversion of the woven as a metaphor.
“It was about controlling time,” says Grabner. “The repetition, the redundancy, the predictability of these domestic backdrops.” Similarly, Paesler claimed the fittings of the early nineties middle-class. Paying attention to the familiar, she unravels and extends what it means.
Like sentences, one swath of paint is read through another. The surface becomes a palimpsest, as if the pattern and its abstraction obstruct each other, coexist.
The co-dependence of the abstract and the concrete is always at play. That’s the crux of the doubling. By transforming familiar fabrics into abstract compositions, Paesler reproduces the way in which tartans and argyles are abstract signifiers of social status. Let’s double down: Paesler’s paintings are an allegory for the abstracting codes of cultural value through which society is organized.
It is a matter of appearances.
Tenzing Barshee & Camila McHugh
Susanne Paesler was born in Darmstadt in 1963 and died in Berlin in 2006. She had one-person exhibitions at Berlinische Galerie, Berlin (2005); Kunsthalle zu Kiel, Kiel (2010); Kunstmuseum Bonn, Bonn (2016); Schauwerk, Sindelfingen (2016). Susanne Paesler’s work is in the collection of the Museum Ludwig, Cologne; Kunstmuseum Bonn, Bonn; Kunsthalle zu Kiel, Kiel; Berlinische Galerie, Berlin, Kunsthaus Zürich, Zurich.
Pattern Recognition
25 January – 22 February 2020
Galerie Barbara Weiss, Berlin, Germany
In cooperation with Tenzing Barshee
In matters of appearance
The paintings are abstract. Lines intersect and overlap to build grids. The compositions are neither calculations nor inventions. They’re based on simple observations, lifted.
These are fabric paintings. Transformed, cropped and copied patterns: argyle socks, checkered tablecloths, the Berlin U-Bahn’s camo. Paesler selected fabrics that reminded her of something.
They’re on the tip of our tongue, a blurred memory of a bourgeois jacket. There is an anecdote somewhere. Grotesque nostalgia for markers of class distinction.
The textile stands in for texture. Paesler responded to a demand for texture in painting. “Being creative,” Anni Albers argued, “is not so much the desire to do something as listening to that which wants to be done: the dictation of materials.” The textile prescribes the painting.
Paesler’s paint embellishes canvas, wood and most often, thin aluminum. Lacquer on metal like car paint, Minimal art’s hang-up on permanence. And Sherrie Levine’s chess and backgammon boards on lead.
As a technique, the pattern is a framing device that creates a limitless sequence of confined spaces. Like the fabric squares she works from, Paesler’s patterns are contained. She frames the framing device, dissects and brackets it.
“Allegorical imagery is appropriated imagery,” writes Craig Owens in Allegorical Impulse (1980), “the allegorist doesn’t invent images but confiscates them.” To copy an image is to double it. Tautologies.
Often translucent, one atop the other, Paesler’s lines are linked, concatenated (con = together + catenare = chained). Braids and chains and knitted loops are superimposed on plaid grids. Like Michelle Grabner’s paintings from crocheted blankets—subversion of the woven as a metaphor.
“It was about controlling time,” says Grabner. “The repetition, the redundancy, the predictability of these domestic backdrops.” Similarly, Paesler claimed the fittings of the early nineties middle-class. Paying attention to the familiar, she unravels and extends what it means.
Like sentences, one swath of paint is read through another. The surface becomes a palimpsest, as if the pattern and its abstraction obstruct each other, coexist.
The co-dependence of the abstract and the concrete is always at play. That’s the crux of the doubling. By transforming familiar fabrics into abstract compositions, Paesler reproduces the way in which tartans and argyles are abstract signifiers of social status. Let’s double down: Paesler’s paintings are an allegory for the abstracting codes of cultural value through which society is organized.
It is a matter of appearances.
Tenzing Barshee & Camila McHugh
Susanne Paesler was born in Darmstadt in 1963 and died in Berlin in 2006. She had one-person exhibitions at Berlinische Galerie, Berlin (2005); Kunsthalle zu Kiel, Kiel (2010); Kunstmuseum Bonn, Bonn (2016); Schauwerk, Sindelfingen (2016). Susanne Paesler’s work is in the collection of the Museum Ludwig, Cologne; Kunstmuseum Bonn, Bonn; Kunsthalle zu Kiel, Kiel; Berlinische Galerie, Berlin, Kunsthaus Zürich, Zurich.