Moma Genzken Preview
Moma Genzken Preview
Moma Genzken Preview
Hoptman
Darling
Grove
Lee
Born in postwar Germany in 1948, Isa Genzken studied at the Dsseldorf Academy
of Fine Arts before embarking on a career that would ultimately encompass deep
explorations of an extraordinary range of mediums, including sculpture, film, drawing,
painting, photography, and assemblage. For some forty years now, Genzken has engaged
with both the most salient aesthetic concerns of the time as well as broader questions
related to our experience of the exuberant and disorienting flux that defines contemporary
culture. The modern urban environment, the nature of space and time, our relationship
to the architecture that surrounds us, as well as the ramifications of seminal events such
as the collapse of the Berlin Wall and the aftermath of September 11all are examined
with virtuosity, humanity, and incisive wit in Genzkens diverse production. Published
in tandem with the artists first major career survey in the United States, Isa Genzken:
Retrospective marks the most comprehensive chronicle to date of the work of one
of the most ambitious and influential artists of the past half century.
genzken
isa genzken
Retrospective
isa genzken
Retrospective
CONTENTS
Directors Foreword
Acknowledgments
14
302
Chronology
Stephanie Weber
319
324
Selected Bibliography
compiled by Stephanie Weber
328
Exhibition Checklist
170
Plates, 19952013
332
254
334
274
286
44
130
Plates, 19741994
Directors Foreword
Madeleine Grynsztejn
Pritzker Director
Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago
Glenn D. Lowry
Director
The Museum of Modern Art, New York
12
13
Sabine Breitwieser
The Characters
of Isa Genzken: Between
the Personal and the
Constructive, 19701996
14
One of the most important artists of our time, Isa Genzken has developed
an unconventional body of work in the postwar German context that
has functioned in critical dialogue with both European and American
art. Specifically in her early work, she responded to Russian and Soviet
Constructivism and American Abstract Expressionism, and sought to
develop a European answer to Minimalism that had international relevance.
Genzkens oeuvre is distinguished by a constant inventiveness, a highly
idiosyncratic artistic approach, and an unmistakable idiom within each
of her diverse groups of work. Although she has veered off in new,
unexpected directions at regular intervals, reviewing her work over the
course of four decades reveals a surprising coherence, one rooted in
the logic of her successive artistic choices as well as in the way in which
her series, in all their remarkable heterogeneity, relate to one another.
Individual works, or groups of work, appear as protagonists in an openended play, one in which personal, autobiographical, and fictional
elements enter into a dialectic with techno-scientific principles and
structural concerns in ways previously considered incompatible.
15
where everyone was rich except for us, the family occupied a oneroom apartment with a single floor-to-ceiling window facing the garden
out back.4 The Germany of Genzkens childhood in the 1950s was still
reeling in the aftermath of the war, and her parents seem to have
tried to compensate for such confined living conditions with creativity.
Near the front door, her mother marked off a childrens room with
a construction of cords.
Genzken has recalled her early personal and artistic development in the
three works Family, Sophienterrasse, and Mittelweg (all 1991). These
sculptures, reminiscent of window frames, are comprised of poured
concrete and epoxy elements of different sizes, hinged together in pairs,
representing the first architectural forms that impressed her. Two similar
sculptures from this period, simply titled Paravent (Screens), have no
personal references and only an indication of a possible function. In this
group of works, Genzken presents hybrid objects that oscillate between
autonomous sculptures and flexible interior architecture. With them,
she seeks to objectify her formative years: her earliest social unit (Family;
fig. 2), the first address she knew (Sophienterrasse), and her first route
to school (Mittelweg). The oscillation of these forms between autonomy
and usefulness reflects at once Genzkens particular formal concerns
while simultaneously addressing the narrowness of our vision, questioning
the meaning of the past and the accuracy of recollection. While two
of the sculptures are cast wholly in concrete, the third and largest one
is unique for the manner in which its material alone seems to exemplify
the unfolding problematics of memory and history in postwar Germany.
In the largest element of the three-part sculpture Family, only a portion
of one of the wings is concrete, whereas the two smaller windows
are cast wholly in epoxy. The transparent epoxy, extremely toxic in the
casting and hardening stages, looks like it is coated in certain areas
by a more massive layer of concrete, as though with a second skin. No
other material evokes German reconstruction after 1945 like concrete.
Indeed, one could draw the conclusion that here, mummified with
epoxy, it represents an archaeology, often experienced as unpleasant,
of collective and individual responsibility for the horrific events of
the 1930s and 1940s.
Fig. 1
As Germany sought to rebuild after the war and began to grapple with
the enormity of its crimes against humanity, it embarked on a building
program of ethical architecture, yet at the same time the postwar
devastation was also seen as an opportunity to implement urban planning
measures that seamlessly meshed with those already conceived by the
Fig. 2
Breitwieser
16
17
44
45
46
Lacquered wood
5/9/219" (14.525558.5 cm)
Courtesy the artist and Galerie Buchholz, Cologne/Berlin
47
Top
Plate 17. Installation view of Ohren (Ears)
(1980) in Isa Genzken, Galerie Konrad Fischer,
Platanenstrasse 7, Dsseldorf, May 30
June 20, 1981
Bottom
Plate 18. Installation view of (fore) Staffelei
(Easel) (1983) and (wall) two Ohren (Ears)
(1980) in JuxtaPosition: skulptur=sculpture,
Charlottenborg Exhibition Hall, Copenhagen,
April 29June 6, 1993
Facing
Plate 19. Ohr, 2002
Digital print on high-performance foil
228153/" (580390 cm)
Installation view at City Hall,
Innsbruck, Austria
64
65
Facing
Plate 21. Mein Gehirn (My Brain), 1984
Synthetic polymer paint on plaster, metal
9/77/" (242018 cm)
Collection Daniel Buchholz
and Christopher Mller, Cologne
68
69
Left
Plate 22. Mllberg
Right
Plate 23. Birne (Pear), 1984
Synthetic polymer paint on plaster,
lightbulb
11/78/" (302022 cm)
Generali Foundation Collection, Vienna
76
77
80
81
Facing
Plate 30. Rosa Zimmer (Pink Room), 1987
Spray paint on concrete, steel
761822/" (1944657 cm)
Generali Foundation Collection, Vienna
Above
Plate 31. Kleiner Pavilion
114
115
Laura Hoptman
Hoptman
130
131
Hoptman
132
set a goal for her work to be not only brilliantly designed but also
the most current, the most relevant, the most modern. The search for
a connection to the moment inspired her to reevaluate the legacy of
the readymade, a strategy which, in its purest form, she explored only
once, with Weltempfnger (World Receiver) (pl. 20), a work consisting
of a state-of-the-art world-band radio receiver placed at eye level
on a high, slim base. In an object like Weltempfnger and, subsequently,
in her full-blown assemblages, Genzken was less interested in matters
of recontextualization (the transformation of a manufactured quotidian
object into an art object through context) than the orchestration
of already-made elements of daily life into a larger narrative. Brilliantly
engineered and executed things in the world like the Weltempfnger,
a pane of precut colored glass, or a cast-plastic toy were not, in and
of themselves, interesting as sculpture, but Genzken realized, perhaps
through her analysis of the role of the photographic image, that they
could carry the weight of representation and of narrative in her sculpture.
I have always said that, with any sculpture you have to be able to say
although this is not a readymade, it could be one, Genzken stated in an
interview with the photographer Wolfgang Tillmans in 2003. Thats what
a sculpture has to look like. It must have a certain relation to reality.5
5 Ibid., 17.
6 Ibid.
133
170
171
Plate 65. I Love New York, Crazy City, 199596 (detail views)
Paper, gelatin silver and chromogenic color
prints, and tape, in three books
Each: 15122" (39327 cm)
Collection the artist
180
181
186
187
202
203
Plate 104. Kinder Filmen III, VI, VIII, XI, and XII
(Children Filming III, VI, VIII, XI, and XII), 2005
218
Spray paint on umbrellas and stands, wood crates, plastic chairs, dolls,
ceramic figurines, plastic safety nets, molded-plastic bubble mirror,
casters, utility cart with wheels, mirrors, books, pens, plastic hanging
board rack, rubber gloves, printed paper, paper bag, toy gun, fabric
hats and vests, tape, electric fan, and electrical components
Dimensions variable
Museum Ludwig, Cologne
219
224
225
Above
Plates 113, 114. Hospital (Ground Zero), 2008
Synthetic polymer paint on fabric, metal dolly,
plastic flowers in spray-painted vase, ribbon, metal,
mirror foil, glass, fiberboard, and casters
122/24/29/" (3126376 cm)
Collection Charles Asprey
234
Facing
Plate 115. Memorial Tower (Ground Zero), 2008
Synthetic polymer paint and spray paint on mirror foil
and tape, plastic, filmstrips, printed paper, fiberboard,
and casters
124/31/35/" (31680.590 cm)
Collection Eric and Suzanne Syz, Switzerland
235
250
251