Schirn Kunsthalle

Bruno Gironcoli

Prototypes For A New Species

14 Feb - 12 May 2019

Bruno Gironcoli, Installationsansicht, 2018, Bruno Gironcoli Museum Herberstein, Steiermark, Foto: Hans Christian Krass
BRUNO GIRONCOLI
Prototypes For A New Species
14 February – 12 May 2019

The Austrian artist Bruno Giron­coli (1936–2010) is one of the most impor­tant sculp­tors of his gener­a­tion. Begin­ning in the early 1960s, drawing on his never-ending inven­tive voracity he created a highly idio­syn­cratic and remark­able oeuvre rendered in a very personal and indi­vidual visual language. In groups of ever-new works he succeeded each time in finding an unmis­tak­able and yet surprising voice. Wire sculp­tures gave way to hollow-body forms, poly­ester objects, and discon­certing envi­ron­ments. Giron­coli’s work always focused on the indi­vidual and his abysses. The artist shared his exis­ten­tial ques­tions and polit­i­cally moti­vated avant-garde thought with fellow artists of the Vien­nese scene. His aesthetics of exor­bi­tance and opulence constantly gave rise to excres­cences and curlicues and have inspired numerous younger artists. In 1977, the eccen­tric Giron­coli took over the direc­tion of the School of Sculp­ture at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. For the first time, he began to create sculp­tures that filled or frequently even defied space, made possible through the generous studio situ­a­tion.

The Schirn Kunsthalle Frank­furt is presenting excerpts from Giron­coli’s monu­mental late oeuvre in a thought-provoking exhi­bi­tion. As if derived from a theater of the absurd or a surreal dream world, the gigantic objects seem to be proto­types of a new species, enveloped in shining, seduc­tive surfaces of gold, silver, and copper. Foreign and yet familiar, their organic forms and set pieces stem from an everyday culture that is often oriented toward the local: we soon believe we can make out a wine barrel, an ear of wheat, or a vine. Then again, Giron­coli stages a strange march-past of infants or an imposing, ant-like sculp­ture. His magnif­i­cent and unset­tling works never fail to surprise us as post­modern pastiches.

 

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