Thomas Schulte

Albrecht Schnider: TOR

15 Nov 2013 - 25 Jan 2014

Ohne Titel, 2013
Entwurf für Landschaft, 2003
Ohne Titel, 2013
Friday, November 15, Albrecht Schnider reveals his wall drawing, TOR, in the nine-meter high Corner Space of the gallery. With the adaption of a paper-sized, miniature drawing into the architecture of the gallery, Schnider challenges the separation of the pictorial from the surface in a new fashion.

A search: the circling hand of Albrecht Schnider across the paper, until it produces a continuous, solid line that, with its fluid changes wrapping around the white of the paper, resembles the oval form of a head or face. That which seems to be a contour is actually a line, following its own path, and, at the same time, deviating from it; the starting and ending point located within its orbit. The borders distinguish inside and outside, the fore and background.
In adapting his paper-sized, miniature drawing into the architecture of the nine-meter high corner space of Galerie Thomas Schulte, Schnider challenges the separation of the pictorial from the surface. The appreciation of the wall-drawing becomes a physical and spatial experience. When searching the exhibition space for the best possible angle, in which to regard the ever-shifting features of the head, the drawing receives an almost sculptural dimension. The circular, black lines, on the one hand, give the impression of being engraved into the wall, and on the other, seem to spring away from the surface. Even the white content of the oval shape gently stands out from the light grey background. The white expands in two ways: in a light volume, which, in a
shell-like manner, bulges into the exhibition space, but also in endless, white depth, rendering the space a sort of stage.
The oversized drawing, placed inside a showcase and in a White-Cube-like situation, enables new ties to be drawn between art and advertising: aesthetic effects, reception, consumption, and modes of presentation. Although these aspects may create additional perceptions and discussions on Schnider’s figurative, graphic works, they primarily lead to the question of a loss of content. By enlarging the graphic form and inserting it into the architecture and its urban surroundings, the very moment of the fleeting content encapsulates the space, in which the observer moves.
(Text: Birgit Szepanski)


Albrecht Schnider (born 1958 in Lucerne, Switzerland) studied at the Hochschule für Gestaltung and the University of Berne. Since 1988 he has received numerous grants and awards for his artistic practice, including Eidgenössisches Kunststipendium in 1989, 1990, and 1992; Istituto Svizzero in Rome in 1990, and the award Manor-Kunstpreis of Lucerne in 1994. In 1998 Kunsthalle Berne presented Schnider’s first solo exhibition and since then the artist has exhibited extensively including museums and institutions in Lucerne, Zurich, Solothurn, and Aarau as recently in Berlin in 2011 at Haus am Waldsee. Schnider is currently preparing a solo exhibition with Helmhaus in Zurich. Albrecht Schnider lives and works in Berlin since 1998.

 

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