Künstlerhaus, Halle für Kunst & Medien

André Butzer / Christian Eisenberger

23 Aug - 18 Sep 2014

André Butzer / Christian Eisenberger, 2014
exhibition view, Künstlerhaus KM–, Halle für Kunst & Medien, photo: Markus Krottendorfer
ANDRÉ BUTZER / CHRISTIAN EISENBERGER
23 August — 18 September 2014

The Künstlerhaus KM–, Halle für Kunst & Medien is pleased to be able to present new paintings by the German artist André Butzer (born 1973 in Stuttgart, lives in Rangsdorf/Brandenburg) in the venue’s main exhibition space. Here Butzer’s artwork encounters the work by artist Christian Eisenberger, who is being shown in parallel. Always starting out with an intensive exploration that probes the boundaries and potentials of painting as a medium, Butzer first generated awareness with his eye-catching, gesturally expressive, and highly variegated paintings, which he himself considers to be in the style of “science fiction expressionism”. Yet while engaging in a continual and consistent process of evolution and further development, an insidious departure from the significant carrier elements (spray paint, emoticons of rather similar smileys or skulls, text material, or paint applied in especially thick strokes) of this sometimes exaggerated but very memorable language of form has emerged. Pictures followed that were created using luminous paints and showed angled and coincident motile lines and formations against a planar, monochrome grey ground. This exploration of colour has increasingly become based on stringent formal questions related to the representational function of colour in general. The two painted pieces on show in this exhibition are part of the series of so-called “N-Bilder” (N-Pictures) initiated in 2010.

All black-and-white paintings in this cycle are united by an alignment to the incalculable dimension of “N”, which is in turn derived from “NASAHEIM”, another neologism spawned by the artist. For André Butzer, this “NASAHEIM”—a constellation of letters elicited from “NASA”, The National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and “Anaheim”, the hometown of Disneyland—is a utopian place, faraway and beyond reach, comparable to a depot of endless size, where any conceivable colour is available. The picture itself keeps perishing there, only to simultaneously re-emerge again and again like a permanent trust. The actual motif is the image as a whole, connected to the beholder’s perception thereof. It follows that the paintings evince a stringent continued development within Butzer’s oeuvre, going back to the formal structures already established in his earlier works. Moreover, the “N-Bilder” reference the basic pictorial direction and the clear proportions of the picture beyond worldly geometry. Brushwork, shifts in colour, and fore- and background of the painting are all ignored, inviting the viewers to precisely discern the contrasts between chromatic verticals and horizontals that are so constituent for the pictures.

In answer to the question as to which artistic legacies he finds himself confronted with, which legacies he could possibly carry forth, and which dead ends might threaten the working process in order to then arrive at results, Butzer gives the following reply in the catalogue accompanying the exhibition: “The legacy does not rest with the artist. The legacy itself is receptive. Art has existed for three thousand years or more. Surely there is nothing that continues on. Art is a peaceful dead end, and it must remain a peaceful dead end forever, otherwise it wouldn’t be art. However, almost no one enters this dead end, that is, the dead end lets almost no one in, and for good reason.”

The Künstlerhaus KM–, Halle für Kunst & Medien is pleased to also be presenting new works by the artist Christian Eisenberger (born 1978 in Semriach, lives and works in Vienna and Semriach) in parallel. Eisenberger first attained broader recognition in the first decade of the twenty-first century thanks to his continual placement of countless painted cardboard boxes in public space. Depicted here were motifs such as social outsiders like migrants, the homeless, but also easy-to-identify great minds of global politics. The approach of working with series continues to be a formative characteristic feature of Eisenberger’s exuberant artistic practice, which he transfers to all facets of his varied interests and explorations. It is based on an unbridled experimental stance, with raw, simple gestures and a “snotty” air, that Eisenberger builds and crafts his large-scale works of installative nature, often using a wealth of materials. Explored here are classic art themes such as life, death, or vanitas motifs, yet they are usually accompanied by an aura of incompleteness, chance, and sometimes also a semblance of caustic humour owing to a revised and subjectivised sense of Dadaism.

For the exhibition at the Künstlerhaus KM–, the artist has specifically worked on a series of comparatively low-key sculptural and painterly works for which he processed the basic material of wood and the canvases used only minimally and with a very raw touch. This “leaving-it-almost-untouched” approach taken by Eisenberger has allowed him to generally succeed in thematising and underscoring the crucial and reciprocal relationship of dependency between material effect and artistic intervention so inherent to each and every work of art. Accordingly, the works compiled at the Künstlerhaus KM– and arranged in an opulent, space-encompassing installation do not help to clearly verify the origin of the wood employed—whether its shape was formed through exposure to natural influences at its source, or whether (and to what degree) it has been subjected to artistic processing by Eisenberger. Of focus here is a critical questioning of art-related genesis myths and terms of authorship—having once again topped the agenda of this artist vaunted for his bustling activity—in addition to issues related to the context dependency of perception and the pursuit of making visible the operant potentials of auratically charging objects and materials by exhibiting them in classic contemporary exhibition venues, as well as the planes of meaning inherent to each transfer of context.
 

Tags: André Butzer, Christian Eisenberger