Jürgen Drescher
08 Nov - 21 Dec 2013
JÜRGEN DRESCHER
Funklöcher
8 November - 21 December 2013
Since the 80s Jürgen Drescher (born 1955 in Karlsruhe, lives and works in Berlin) has taken everyday objects and situations as his departure point for investigating contemporary modes of existence. He initially attracted attention with his aluminum casts of everyday objects, so to speak a sculptural metaphor and extrapolation. Most recently his work was presented in Düsseldorf at the exhibition "Die Bildhauer.
Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, 1945 bis heute" at the K20 art space for the collection of North Rhine-Westphalia. This spring Drescher had a solo show at the Badische Kunstverein in Karlsruhe. We have the pleasure of presenting him for the third time at Mai 36 Gallery.
In his book, “Berlin Childhood around 1900”, Walter Benjamin describes the telephone as “an outcast settled carelessly between the dirty-linen hamper and the gasometer”. Since conversation was not conducted face to face, the device was not considered socially acceptable in bourgeois households.
In his extensive solo show at the Kunstverein Karlsruhe in the spring of 2013, Jürgen Drescher exhibited two groups of figures in the main hall, similar in design but seemingly unrelated. This initial detachment might be viewed as a metaphor for the failure of communication. In the exhibition at Mai 36 Gallery Drescher returns to this idea in a work titled Funklöcher (Dead Spots) that shows an installation of large objects, some of them cast in aluminum. We are familiar with dead spots in communication in the countryside, in valleys and peripheral areas lacking the necessary technology.
The exhibited works are derived from objects found in a barn belonging to Drescher's sister in a village in Lower Bavaria. This lends them a sense of home, family and closeness: not only between people, but also a closeness to situations and objects and indeed the rural economy as a whole. The door, reproduced on the invitation, comes from the razed farmhouse of the neighboring Maier family and appears to be covered in verdigris. The pattern of rhombuses, reminiscent of pre-Christian symbols of salvation, references older civilizations that were more dependent on their environment and therefore less likely to engage in the ruthless exploitation of their natural resources.
In the same Bavarian town, Drescher dug out the two poles of a clothesline that was to make way for a planned garden. He managed to lift the 100 kg concrete foundation blocks by himself with the help of a pushcart and using the poles as levers. This aspect of recovering the complete construction is integrated into an installation, in which there are no longer any clotheslines strung between the poles – as if to bear witness to the way the inhabitants and the artist dealt with the resources on this farm.
In an interview on House of Carpets, Sinai 2012, a work commissioned for the exhibition “Art in the City” 2012 in Zurich and since exhibited internationally, Jürgen Drescher said that we have become so disconnected from fundamental economic structures that we are no longer aware of the negative impact of our own actions on the lives of others.
The casting of an object is an elementary process. Original parts and aluminum casts are combined into a whole. One can view the partial cast, the simultaneous presence of cast parts and original parts, as a stage on the way to a complete cast or as an attempt to reconstruct a whole. In the case of a sleigh, cast in solid aluminum and weighing 90 kg, the weight of the original wooden shaft lying on top has become a metaphorical load. The sleigh and a piece of clapboard roof – objects taken out of their utilitarian context and arrested in the time and space of the gallery – draw attention to themselves and encourage reflection.
(Text: Ulrike Solbrig)
Funklöcher
8 November - 21 December 2013
Since the 80s Jürgen Drescher (born 1955 in Karlsruhe, lives and works in Berlin) has taken everyday objects and situations as his departure point for investigating contemporary modes of existence. He initially attracted attention with his aluminum casts of everyday objects, so to speak a sculptural metaphor and extrapolation. Most recently his work was presented in Düsseldorf at the exhibition "Die Bildhauer.
Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, 1945 bis heute" at the K20 art space for the collection of North Rhine-Westphalia. This spring Drescher had a solo show at the Badische Kunstverein in Karlsruhe. We have the pleasure of presenting him for the third time at Mai 36 Gallery.
In his book, “Berlin Childhood around 1900”, Walter Benjamin describes the telephone as “an outcast settled carelessly between the dirty-linen hamper and the gasometer”. Since conversation was not conducted face to face, the device was not considered socially acceptable in bourgeois households.
In his extensive solo show at the Kunstverein Karlsruhe in the spring of 2013, Jürgen Drescher exhibited two groups of figures in the main hall, similar in design but seemingly unrelated. This initial detachment might be viewed as a metaphor for the failure of communication. In the exhibition at Mai 36 Gallery Drescher returns to this idea in a work titled Funklöcher (Dead Spots) that shows an installation of large objects, some of them cast in aluminum. We are familiar with dead spots in communication in the countryside, in valleys and peripheral areas lacking the necessary technology.
The exhibited works are derived from objects found in a barn belonging to Drescher's sister in a village in Lower Bavaria. This lends them a sense of home, family and closeness: not only between people, but also a closeness to situations and objects and indeed the rural economy as a whole. The door, reproduced on the invitation, comes from the razed farmhouse of the neighboring Maier family and appears to be covered in verdigris. The pattern of rhombuses, reminiscent of pre-Christian symbols of salvation, references older civilizations that were more dependent on their environment and therefore less likely to engage in the ruthless exploitation of their natural resources.
In the same Bavarian town, Drescher dug out the two poles of a clothesline that was to make way for a planned garden. He managed to lift the 100 kg concrete foundation blocks by himself with the help of a pushcart and using the poles as levers. This aspect of recovering the complete construction is integrated into an installation, in which there are no longer any clotheslines strung between the poles – as if to bear witness to the way the inhabitants and the artist dealt with the resources on this farm.
In an interview on House of Carpets, Sinai 2012, a work commissioned for the exhibition “Art in the City” 2012 in Zurich and since exhibited internationally, Jürgen Drescher said that we have become so disconnected from fundamental economic structures that we are no longer aware of the negative impact of our own actions on the lives of others.
The casting of an object is an elementary process. Original parts and aluminum casts are combined into a whole. One can view the partial cast, the simultaneous presence of cast parts and original parts, as a stage on the way to a complete cast or as an attempt to reconstruct a whole. In the case of a sleigh, cast in solid aluminum and weighing 90 kg, the weight of the original wooden shaft lying on top has become a metaphorical load. The sleigh and a piece of clapboard roof – objects taken out of their utilitarian context and arrested in the time and space of the gallery – draw attention to themselves and encourage reflection.
(Text: Ulrike Solbrig)