St. Andreas Slominski
05 Mar - 28 Aug 2022
St. Andreas Slominski, Installation view, Kunstmuseum St.Gallen, Photo: Stefan Rohner, © Andreas Slominski
Andreas Slominski (*1959, Meppen) is one of the most important artists of his generation and has become known internationally as a “trap setter.” This versatile conceptual artist, who lives near Berlin, engages seriously and yet humorously with the contradictions of life.
In an exhibition at the Kunstmuseum St. Gallen, Slominski will present reliefs, paintings, and drawings, as well as several sculptures. A colorful liveliness emanates from the reliefs, while other works strive for clear elegance, and a third group of works is rough and uncouth. The works are made of polystyrene, which is meant to insulate and warm.
The exhibition begins with sharp traps that Slominski invented for all kinds of art spaces. When touched, they are triggered. In their refinement and brutality they are fascinating bearers and interpreters of social mechanisms, while also conveying precise intellectual analyses and psychoanalytic shifts. Visitors to Slominski’s exhibition will come away with greater self-knowledge, having enjoyed sculptures and pictures made of unusual materials of great concentration and impressiveness.
Curator: Roland Wäspe
In an exhibition at the Kunstmuseum St. Gallen, Slominski will present reliefs, paintings, and drawings, as well as several sculptures. A colorful liveliness emanates from the reliefs, while other works strive for clear elegance, and a third group of works is rough and uncouth. The works are made of polystyrene, which is meant to insulate and warm.
The exhibition begins with sharp traps that Slominski invented for all kinds of art spaces. When touched, they are triggered. In their refinement and brutality they are fascinating bearers and interpreters of social mechanisms, while also conveying precise intellectual analyses and psychoanalytic shifts. Visitors to Slominski’s exhibition will come away with greater self-knowledge, having enjoyed sculptures and pictures made of unusual materials of great concentration and impressiveness.
Curator: Roland Wäspe