Marijn van Kreij: 'Nude in front of a Garden' with a contribution by Andrea Büttner
25 Jun - 06 Aug 2016
Untitled (Pablo Picasso, The Artist and his Model, 1964), 2013, gouache and pencil on paper, 195 x 152 cm, detail
Marijn van Kreij’s work in ‘Nude in front of a Garden’ seems to challenge, unwillingly, the possibility of creating a genuinely new piece of art in a world where fast-paced, inter-contextual reproduction mechanisms take place continuously. The artist seized fragments of late Picasso paintings, copied them in watery paint and sequenced them following a penciled grid. Whether this recurring repetition is a form of insistence in it self or insisting on a petered out artistic strategy remains to be seen. Either way it eventually becomes clear that these works are in no way an ironic comment on our fleeting visual culture as such. Inattention and concentration are both present within these works, which makes it hard to take a position when in front of them. Moreover its maker desired to pair up his series with a sound piece by fellow artist Andrea Büttner, called ‘Roth Reading’, in which Büttner reads out aloud all passages on shame and embarrassement in Roth’s diary from 19882. Here the notion of shame, a fundamental and deep, but rarely discussed anxiety of many artists, if not all, is introduced alongside these works. This piece suddenly seems to splinter the late oeuvre of one of the supposedly greatest artists of all time into a faltering amalgam of reiterated imagery. The meaning of progress, personally as well as culturally, seems to be the main question at stake here.