post-title Spencer Finch | Decoy | Galerie Nordenhake Berlin | 03.05.-05.07.2025

Spencer Finch | Decoy | Galerie Nordenhake Berlin | 03.05.-05.07.2025

Spencer Finch | Decoy | Galerie Nordenhake Berlin | 03.05.-05.07.2025

Spencer Finch | Decoy | Galerie Nordenhake Berlin | 03.05.-05.07.2025

until 05.07. | #4681ARTatBerlin | Galerie Nordenhake Berlin presents from 03. May 2025 (Vernissage: 02.05.) the exhibition Decoy by the artist Spencer Finch.

In his sixth solo show in Berlin, Spencer Finch continues to explore the meaning of color, the passing of time, and the relationship between science and poetry. The exhibition entitled Decoy includes new pieces and important older works that in their radical reduction create a dynamic movement between abstraction and a precise rendering of the ephemeral. In the works on paper, paintings, and a large light installation for the gallery’s windows, he succeeds in making the fleeting and evanescent palpable and in documenting perspectives that often escape our notice.

Finch’s engagement with light and color always refers to the impossibility of reaching a singular truth. The series of bright monochromatic diptychs that gives the exhibition its title plays with the telling ambiguity of doublings, reflections, and deception. Each of the two square panels in each diptych show the same secondary colors green, purple, or orange. They were mixed using four colors; the shades of the four paints used for each square vary only slightly from another. These different colors can be seen on the outer edges of each square and thus reveal the composition. What seems like two squares of the same color changes subtly depending on the perspective and in combination with the colors of the edges. The marginal differences require a slowed perception and determine the speed of reception for the exhibition as a whole.

ART at Berlin - Nordenhake - Spencer Finch - 1

Snow (Orion), 2025, archival inkjet print, 77.5 x 77.5 cm, 30 1/2 x 30 1/2 in.

His Scent Drawings generate a synesthetic experience with their sensually interlaced representation. Decelerated vision is also necessary to recognize these drawings, in which Finch refers to paintings by Manet, Matisse, and Hasegawa. When the light falls in a certain way and from a particular angle, subtle outlines become visible and perceptible. They generate the sensation of a discreet scent and seem like fragments of a sensory impression that is scarcely nameable. Finch underscores the complexity of a perceived moment, questioning at the same time the dominance of the visual in the emergence of our memories. In his works, he captures what escapes our automatic perception. Fleeting phenomena, like the reflection of Emily Dickinson’s garden in a single raindrop on a window pane, become poetic approaches to something that is impossible to return to. He thus creates sensual links between past and present.

Finch takes a comparable approach in his work on the gallery window. Using color filters, he reconstructs the light and the color of the sunset that he was able to observe from his studio in Brooklyn. The gaze here is toward the west, just like the window in his studio. But instead of a clear view, our vision here is blocked. This results in a superimposed simultaneity of memory and the present. Finch succeeds in reproducing this moment in a way that goes beyond the fragile indexicality of a photograph. His interest in making fleeting visual phenomena palpable is expressed in a special way in his Fog Studies. He turns to the depiction of fog to capture the natural phenomenon and at the same time points to the limitation of our vision, a paradox that enables us to reflect upon the opening of new layers of perception that this allows.

Just like a decoy, the works in this exhibition capture our gaze to direct it to something that pretends to be something else, a playful game that tricks our senses. Finch demonstrates how scientific approaches to phenomena such as light, color, and memory are inadequate. His restful, poetic engagement creates a form of recognition that lies beyond the measurable. It slows our perception to focus on the beauty of our surroundings that otherwise passes by unnoticed.

Opening: Friday, 02. May 2025, 6 – 9 pm

Exhibition period: Saturday, 03 May – Saturday, 05. July 2025

Opening hours Gallery Weekend Berlin:
Saturday, 03. May 2025, 11 am – 7 pm
Sunday, 04. May 2025, 11 am – 6 pm

To the Gallery

 

 

Image caption: Decoy (green), 2025, acrylic on custom birch plywood panels, each 35.56 x 35.56 cm, 14 x 14 in.

Exhibition Spencer Finch – Galerie Nordenhake Berlin | Zeitgenössische Kunst in Berlin | Contemporary Art | Exhibitions Berlin Galleries | ART at Berlin

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Masterpieces in Berlin

You can visit numerous impressive artistic masterpieces from all eras in Berlin’s museums. But where exactly will you find works by Albrecht Dürer, Claude Monet, Vincent van Gogh, Sandro Botticelli, Peter Paul Rubens or the world-famous Nefertiti? We will introduce you to the most impressive artistic masterpieces in Berlin. And can lead you to the respective museum with only one click. So that you can personally experience and enjoy your favourite masterpiece live.

Loading…
 
Send this to a friend