König

Manuel Graf

22 Jan - 16 Feb 2008

Qu'est que c'est la maturité
Manuel Graf
Qu'est que c'est la maturité
Tue 22. Jan 2008 - Sat 16. Feb 2008

"The Seam and the Jump sit on the seesaw, riding up and down. Today, the Seam is wearing a beautiful oriental gown, loosely woven, with a meandering ornament. She designs wonderful jewellery as she thinks back. She is fond of the Jump, sitting across from her wanting to seesaw with her wildly. The Jump finds the Seam a bit dull, with her unending rapport. He would rather meet up with his young lads, the Thrust and the Pulse. They perfectly suit his tastes: always going ahead, always at the construction site. After all, the Jump only finds the Seam tedious because she can be there more often and still never be bored. Soon, they will all get together in Arcadia. Tego and Texo will also come.


Manuel Graf sets two handmade tea services and a video projection in theatrical relationship. The small sculptures are mirrored as images in the film “Qu'est que c'est la maturité”, 2008 (What is maturity) – a kind of animated Revue theater in three acts. During the first act, tea cups, sugar bowl and teapot, designed as a classical architectural ensemble, spin to a Waltz tempo under a spotlight. The images convey a lulling and sedating effect, as if in the contemplation of a musical box. The second act leads towards the absurd with artificially accelerated and overwound music. An Ikebana construction site grows from nothingness like a design for a plug-in-city from architect group ARCHIGRAM, while ripe oranges weigh on the scaffolding. They are not harvested, but left to rot and fall about. Straight away, fresh fruit is delivered and the process begins all over again. Converted into a carousel, an orange tree goes merry-go-round in the third act, as seesaws are replaced by bonbon-coloured fetishes dangling in the air: high heels on silk ribbons from today and past á la Bernard Rudofsky.

On the small stage, he lets a kind of voodoo magic occur, as tea sets, profane objects symbolic of tradition, contemplation and maturity, are charged with childish fantasy. Sounds and images possess the dead material as a creative breath does the modelled clay. In so doing, Graf plays with an ancient desire of humanity: to bestow inanimate, handmade things with life as if with a magic wand. At the same time canonising the mundane, the act of drinking tea leads to a space beyond ideologies; Arcadia, where both the childish and the mature coexist.

Grafs video works, frequently accompanied by objects, are deeply permeated by historical references and allusions. The complex iconography in his works is drawn from a great fascination for architecture, pop and fashion, as well as a profound understanding of these fields. With a light-footed, playful handwriting, Graf has developed an explicit artistic position within the theoretical discourse.

Johann König, Berlin is pleased to present the second solo gallery exhibition of the artist. Manuel Graf (*1978 in Böhl, Baden) studied at the Arts Academy of Düsseldorf. Previously, his work has been shown in the Kunstverein Göttingen as well as the Museum X, Mönchengladbach (Rheingold Collection). From then on, his work was to be seen in collective exhibitions in the Kunstverein Nürnberg and the Julia Stoschek Collection in Düsseldorf. In 2008, he will be participating in the exhibition Mode und Verzweiflung (Fashion and Desperation) at the Museumsquartier in Vienna, as well as in a group exhibition at LCCA in Riga.
 

Tags: Archigram, Manuel Graf