Greene Naftali

Michaela Meise

20 May - 20 Jun 2009

© Michaela Meise
Installation view
MICHAELA MEISE

May 20 - June 20 2009

Greene Naftali is pleased to present the second New York solo exhibition by Michaela Meise, following her recent exhibition at the Badischer Kunstverein, Karlsruhe. Meise is part of a younger generation of German artists engaging in abstraction as a handcrafted and poetic attempt to convey subjective experience. Her work has been included in a number of exhibitions that highlight this practice including Formalism: Modern Art Today curated by Michael Krebber at the Kunstverein Hamburg in 2004 and Of Mice and Men, the 4th Berlin Biennial in 2006. Meise’s work in particular draws on a tradition of abstract sculpture from Charlotte Posenenske to Ann Truitt, Roni Horn, the early work of Isa Genzken, or the reduced forms Richard Tuttle.
For this exhibition, Meise proposes a set of columns, evoking multiple references—from architecture and institutional structures, to minimalism, the environment, domesticity, and folk traditions. Her pillars, stained with organic gouaches used to color toys for Rudolf Steiner kindergarten classrooms, show a sensitivity to surface and craft. In the main space, Meise has choreographed a lyrical installation of her Trans columns, made of beechwood bases and pinewood rods. Meise’s B�, or groupings of wooden poles tied together with twine, stand at different heights in the back room of the gallery.
A series of wall pieces rings the sculptural installation. Highly finished red Plexiglas panels, drilled into the walls with black screws, display appropriated objects on their surfaces—advertisements, Starbuck's questionnaires, sheets of a hotel notepad, a flattened tissue box, and book covers from biographies of women from Hanau (the artist's hometown). Hung in the room like informational plaques, they suggest a back-story to the collection of sculptures. Processes of accumulation, globalism, craft and consumption are found in these clippings and echoed in Meise's sculptural forms.
With this new work, Meise continues to cast a foreign eye on her surroundings, presenting what constitutes a personal history or travel narrative. The artist's careful attention to her materials displays a natural and thoughtful response to everyday realities, demonstrating abstraction's potential as a distillation of our daily experience.
Michaela Meise lives and works in Berlin, Germany.
 

Tags: Isa Genzken, Roni Horn, Michael Krebber, Michaela Meise, Charlotte Posenenske, A.L. Steiner, Rudolf Steiner, Richard Tuttle