
BEHIND THE SCENES:
MINYADES
An exhibition of paintings by Richard Höglund
The Bonnier Gallery, Miami
December 2021
A Catalogue Essay

BEHIND THE SCENES:
MISCHA KUBALL
ReferenzRäume
Museum Morsbroich
5 December – 24 April 2022

BEHIND THE SCENES:
ABOUT THE TREES
Thanksgiving 2021

UNAPOLOGETIC CONTENT.

BEHIND THE SCENES:
THE WORLD MAP
Thanks to Mr Hide

BEHIND THE SCENES:
KOEN VANMECHELEN LABIOMISTA, GENK (BELGIUM)
The book launch and debate
“NOT TO BE MISTAKEN”, November, 4th

BEHIND THE SCENES:
OCTOBER 2021
"Linda Karshan: The Covid-19 Conversation"
Still in the limelight

BEHIND THE SCENES:
IDE TO POLAND
POSTSCRIPT PARIS

BEHIND THE SCENES:
IDE TO POLAND III
Out of the oven
Warsaw Sept 28-Oct 3

BEHIND THE SCENES:
HELMUT FEDERLE
NOVARTIS Campus – Forum 3, Basel
DIENER & DIENER - WIEDERIN
2005

BEHIND THE SCENES:
BETWEEN LISTENING AND TELLING
Esther Shalev Gerz
Nuit Blanche Paris,
Tonight

UNAPOLOGETIC CONTENT.

BEHIND THE SCENES:
ART BASEL HALL 2.0C1
René Schmitt and ART & LANGUAGE
THESE SCENES, 2016

BEHIND THE SCENES:
MISCHA KUBALL
Wolfsburg and Utopias

BEHIND THE SCENES:
IDE TO POLAND
A new expedition on the CERAMIC & FOOD ROUTE

BEHIND THE SCENES:
IDE TO POLAND
A new expedition on the CERAMIC & FOOD ROUTE
Bright blue and white ceramics fill the dining room with warmth and visual appeal

BEHIND THE SCENES:
IDE TO POLAND
A new expedition on the CERAMIC & FOOD ROUTE
Starts today in Warsaw through 3 October

BEHIND THE SCENES:
ESTHER SHALEV-GERZ
SUMMER IN PARIS

UNAPOLOGETIC CONTENT.

BEHIND THE SCENES:
ON THE ROAD AGAIN
ARCO MADRID,
1st Art Fair in 2 years

UNAPOLOGETIC CONTENT.

UNAPOLOGETIC CONTENT.

UNAPOLOGETIC CONTENT.

BEHIND THE SCENES:
IN THE ARTIST'S STUDIO
JASON BUTLER "THE COLLAGES"
Pop-Up Exhibition, Jersey

STILL BEHIND THE SCENES:
NINA NOWAK'S EXHIBITION
Galleri Susanne Ottesen, Copenhagen

BEHIND THE SCENES:
PER KIRKEBY UNREALISED BRICK PROJECTS
Galleri Susanne Ottesen, Copenhagen

NEW ARRIVALS:
MISCHA KUBALL

A WALK IN MY LIBRARY:
HELMUT FEDERLE NIETZSCHE-HAUS SILS-MARIA
Schwabe AG Basel, 2004 Peter André Bloch & Jan Thorn-Prikker
on the occasion of Helmut Federle's "Edelweiss im Nietzsche-Haus, Sils-Maria" exhibition in Nietzsche's Haus, Sept 2004 to July 2005

BEHIND THE SCENES:
L'INTERSTICE ARLES OPENING
JOSETTE SAYERS AND GUILLAUME ZUILI'S PHOTOGRAPHS
Brave and fearless

BEHIND THE SCENES:
CONGRATULATIONS ISHMAEL ANNOBIL
DIRECTOR for "LINDA KARSHAN: COVID-19 CONVERSATION"
WINNER BEST SHORT DOCUMENTARY AT MYKONOS INTL FILM FES

BEHIND THE SCENES:
THE LAUNCH OF REAL TIME AND THE 3BS

BEHIND THE SCENES:
FLOWERS OF PERHAPS
LIOR GAL
ENGELS PLEIN, LEUVEN BELGIUM

BEHIND THE SCENES:
MATHILDE BRETILLOT DESIGNS NEW MUSEUM FOR LA MANUFACTURE DE GIEN

THIS TIME TWO YEARS AGO:
DRAW ART FAIR, LONDON, 2019, DESIGNER MATHILDE BRETILLOT AND ARCHITECT MISKA MILLER-LOVEGROVE

NEW ARRIVALS:
WETTERLING, STOCKHOLM

A WALK IN MY LIBRARY:
HELMUT FEDERLE
ABSTRACT PAINTING OF AMERICA AND EUROPE
Ritter Verlag, Galerie nächst St. Stephan, Vienna Rosemarie Schwarzwälder, 1988

BEHIND THE SCENES:
LUKAS HOFFMANN, CNAP ACQUISITION AND TWO EXHIBITIONS

BEHIND THE SCENES:
ESTHER SHALEV-GERZ, WEFRAC 2021

BEHIND THE SCENES:
"LINDA KARSHAN: COVID-19 CONVERSATION"
selected by Nawada and Hollywood Boulevard Festivals

BEHIND THE SCENES:
ESTHER SHALEV-GERZ
CNAP ACQUISITION,
"Describing Labor", 2012

BEHIND THE SCENES:
A STUDIO VISIT WITH DEANNA PETHERBRIDGE

BEHIND THE SCENES:
JSVCPROJECTS & INTERNATIONAL DESIGN EXPEDITIONS

BEHIND THE SCENES:
HELMUT FEDERLE IN NEW YORK

BEHIND THE SCENES:
RICHARD MILAZZO OBSZINE #3
The Sadness of Bad Thinking

BEHIND THE SCENES:
RICHARD MILAZZO OBSZINE #3, ART, POETRY, AND THE PATHOS OF COMMUNICATION,
The Art of Impeachment

BEHIND THE SCENES:
WITH POET/CURATOR RICHARD MILAZZO
REVISITING OBSZINE #3

A WALK IN MY LIBRARY:
POETRY IN SEDITIOUS TIMES

HAPPY NEW YEAR AND SOUVENIRS FROM 2020!

BEHIND THE SCENES:
BERLIN STUDIO VISIT – LUKAS HOFFMANN
October 12th 2020
Part I
I have been interested in the work of Lukas Hoffmann since his first group show eight years ago, where a flat side wall of a suburban Swiss apartment house rose blankly up from the foreground; black and white, crisp, formalist, austere, but awkwardly tender if not registering some kind of loss. He has worked continuously over the years with a large box camera – in a process that I tell people is akin to hunting for moments and forgotten views. He is a conceptual artist whose art is about places he finds when he is walking or riding a bicycle or pushing a baby carriage. Unseen corners of typical neighborhoods, places concrete and chain link fences get mashed up, tangled green areas outside suburban sprawl. This perspective – though certainly not the same visual language or eye – shares a kind of territory with Dutch conceptualist decades his senior, Jan Dibbets.
Hoffmann has been attracted from the beginning to anonymous spaces and architectural views we pass without a second glance: a break in the curb at the edge of parking by apartments, facades in shadow, a broken fence. Things in the wrong place because no one cared and threw them thoughtlessly, or because they fell that way without fanfare.
There is no causality in this work. It is just like that. Chaotic accumulations through his eye become elegant and spare. He looks at everyday places in familiar domestic situations. Generic Swiss towns on the edge of unkempt landscapes that tidy villages keep at bay.
My first vivid response to his work was in Zug, maybe 2012/13. I laugh now thinking how easy it was to jump on trains from Zurich; easy then to see shows of young artists. He made a radical twenty-four part work, photographs of a hedgerow that gave me goose bumps as I walked back and forth slowly taking in the nondescript aspect of this accumulation of tangles and knots you would normally pass by without taking notice.

Part II
Being there. He manages to raise the aesthetic nature of this abandoned row of shrubs that covers so much of the world we never stop to look. In his box camera the details sing, one meter after the next, a chorus so loud that I still remember the experience all these years later.
This work struck me as so important that when he showed me the dummy of the book that accompanies his current museum exhibition and it didn’t include this, I raised a huge fuss. He stopped the printing scheduled for the following day and revised the layout with the designer to include this 24-part silver gelatin print work as a leporello, an accordion-pleated insert. You will see a photo of it in this post. The book UNTITLED OVERGROWTH, is wonderful.
Going back to Berlin, I had not seen Lukas in a year or so, and he had taken a new studio, which we see here as a storefront, the entry where a big table sits between stacks of wrapped works.

The large box camera is nearby and he shows me again its structure and the massive negatives. There is a darkroom downstairs and he is working on a recent commission, the sculptural frame on the studio wall.

I want to mention here the Bronx Wall work as well with three spreads as details. He had a fellowship in New York over two years ago, and spent time wandering in Brooklyn and the Bronx for places that were his kind of spots, pushing his son in the stroller for hours on end. It was on one of these walks that he found the distressed walls you see here.




Following his return to Europe there is a new series of street photographs taken with almost a hidden camera held at his waist has the studied casualness of a crowd, where you sense the nature of someone’s character by the way their shorts graze a knee, or the way a purse is worn slightly akimbo. The sweep of motion is palpable along with the light of the sun and the street sounds.

Part III
From UNTITLED OVERGROWTH
Dr. Matthias Haldemann is Director Kunsthaus Zug
Image Formation
On Lukas Hoffmann’s Recent Photographs

“A paradox is already inherent in the creation of these works. For instance, when the artist, during his expeditions on foot or by bicycle through the tangled urban outskirts of Berlin or New York, becomes aware of unassuming corners devoid of people – chilly facades, back courtyards, underpasses, construction sites, hedges run rampant, and wastelands. And when he later returns there with his large-format camera to take planned photographs. His circumspect treatment of the incidental, the provisional, the commonplace, the stagnant and the abandoned things with under-determined identity, continues during the developing process in his own darkroom, where he meticulously enlarges and frames each of the rigorously culled images.”
“The photographic constellations of visibility prove to be transitionally tipping intermediate products of reality and image, which have their own strong immediacy and presence. They exist directly in the here and now, showing what is really absent in the there and once, creating associations of inner, remembered images, yet are neither the one nor the other. In the experience of the seeing seen, the remembered, the imagined, and the animated created in an image in proper time, something open-yet-concealed appears: a possible accrual of being.”

Part IV
From UNTITLED OVERGROWTH
Maren Lubbke-Tidow
Realms of Dissemblance
On the Pictorial Methods of the
Photographer Lukas Hoffmann
“When viewing this work, we intuitively know that anything “additional” or “more” that we may discern there comes from our capacity for imagination. Hoffmann’s work is very generally aligned to the project of (postwar) modernism, and he works with images in which the creative issues so evident in art during that period are now reappearing today.”
“Hoffmann’s project involves finding, in his medium, a productive way of dealing with this decisive paradigm of photography – while simultaneously developing a specific visual program that allows him to depart slightly from this very paradigm; or that at least allows it to recede into the background of perception. At any rate, we can definitely note that it is possible to name the referent in all of Lukas Hoffmann’s photographs. He uses an analogue large-format camera to take pictures in areas that we would designate as places of small industry, agriculture, housing developments. Or even just as abandoned or overgrown sites. Most recently, portraits have been added. I consider this decision on the part of the artist- namely, allowing the referent of his images to remain identifiable despite the moments of disorientation that are played with here – to be a decisive commitment to his medium, to photography. An approach to reading his images which asserts that the photographic apparatus only serves as a means to an end, so as to give his viewers something “else” – namely, a picture reminiscent of a drawing or painting – is not appropriate for his work, even if we are inclined to consider his pictorial works within the context of other forms of fine art.”