post-title Three Positions. Six Directions. | Group exhibition | KÖNIG GALERIE | 21.01.–12.02.2017

Three Positions. Six Directions. | Group exhibition | KÖNIG GALERIE | 21.01.–12.02.2017

Three Positions. Six Directions. | Group exhibition | KÖNIG GALERIE | 21.01.–12.02.2017

Three Positions. Six Directions. | Group exhibition | KÖNIG GALERIE | 21.01.–12.02.2017

until 12.02. | #1024ARTatBerlin | KÖNIG GALERIE presents from 21th January 2017 the group exhibiton “Three Positions. Six Directions. – Chapter I: The Brutalist Ideal”.

As the title suggests, the very location of the exhibition is at the core of its theme: ST. AGNES both contains it and inspires it. A show in three parts presents both impressions from and reactions to the architecture, the history, and its current repurposing, as expressed through a changing group of works by artists ranging from historical to contemporary and emerging. A single work remains throughout the run of the three “chapters” over three months, Franz Erhard Walther’s Drei Standstellen. Sechs Richtungen (1977), serving as the constant pulse of the exhibition as the space of the gallery is reconfigured for each changing show.

Chapter I: The Brutalist Ideal

Atelier van Lieshout, Mathieu Bonardet, Alicja Kwade, Navid Nuur, Pieter Vermeersch, Franz Erhard Walther, Christoph Weber

ST. AGNES is a prime example of Brutalist architecture. More than style or fashion, it was a mentality and even a philosophy that inspired the simplicity, physical and ethical gravity, and economy that the building embodies. It is with these same reductive ideas that the artworks presented here were born. With the dedication to a single material (i.e. Christoph Weber) or the focus on the simple-yet-complex relationship between the body, space and matter (i.e. Mathieu Bonardet) we sense a distillation to the essence in these works. And this efficiency is reflected as well in the ideas that come from Atelier van Lieshout’s Slave City series, extending these principles to a societal perspective.

Brutalism also embraced the power of the neutral space, envisioning an architectural ideal where buildings are efficient containers wherein human use activates and fulfils its potential. The sculptural interactive works of Franz Erhard Walther exemplify these ideas most forcefully and effectively, both as static elements and as activated performances. And towards its goal to neutralize space, the absence of decoration played an important role in the execution of these structures, and it becomes an interesting discourse as we determine whether the purpose of texture or pattern is necessity or decorative, and how we play a role in defining that (i.e. Navid Nuur, Pieter Vermeersch).

This show was created in collaboration with r/e projects.

Vernissage: Friday, 20th January 2017 6 to 9 p.m.

Exhibition period: Saturday, 21th January to Sunday, 12th February 2017

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Image caption: Atelier Van Lieshout
The Beginning of Everything, 2016
mixed media
230 x 73 x 67 cm | 90 1/2 x 28 3/4 x 26 1/3 in
(Detail shot)

Group exhibition Three Positions. Six Directions. – KÖNIG GALERIE – Kunst in Berlin ART at Berlin

 

 

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