- Simon Halfmeyer
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- Projections of Nature
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- “The question of what constitutes beauty, I
cannot answer”. This quotation has been
passed down to us by Albrecht Dürer, layed down in one of his many surviving
manuscripts. Dürer was a contemporary
of Leonardo da Vinci, and it has been acclaimed by Eberhard Roters that with
these two central figures of European art, a new type of artist was born into the World: “The artist
as thoughtfull and reflective, the theoretician applied to art”.(1) In the public perception of Dürer as an
artist, these qualities remain secondary to realism. His works decorating many a living room or
Doctors surgery, whether in form of “The Hare” (1502) or as “The Large Turf“
(1503), both works currently in the Albertina collection in Vienna. What would Dürer have answered, if the
question had referred to nature instead of beauty, what is nature? Perhaps he would have answered in the same
way. The aforementioned works by Dürer
suggest something to us, which the counterpoint of nature subsequently
strengthens. We can ratify this
viewpoint with a further quotation from Dürer:
“Art is contained within nature herself, and whoever can extract this
has it in his hand”.
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- In order to recognize the specific artistic
methods employed by Simon Halfmeyer a historical review is necessary. Only such a review can explain the differing
dimensions, proportions and techniques which form the underlying basis of his work. Under dimensions we refer to the
societal conditions in which man stands in relation to nature. Proportions refer to the observational
relationship between object and subject.
Techniques refer to relationships of production and reproduction both
contained within the work itself, and related to external factors. However, it is obvious that these three
factors observe no clear demarcation lines and tend to overlap.
- The dimensions are shown as being different in
the period of Albrecht Dürer to those of
the period of Caspar David Friedrich.
Whereas with Dürer the tools and methods of presentation as well as
object, come into question, with Caspar
David Friedrich nature has become its own medium of presentation: the nature
portrays itself as a projection as opposed to being portrayed. In this projection nature reveals itself as a
pool, firstly as a projection canvass and subsequently as a source for artistic
exploitation. It is significant that
only the impressionism with Cezanne still knows this portrayal of nature. Expressionism in contrast sees very clearly
the demarcation between city and nature.
This retreat from nature is historically concurrent with
industrialization. City landscapes
replace natural ones. In this
confrontation the expression, “city or industrial landscape” becomes a paradox,
which gains legitimacy only when nature becomes part of the city. We gain an impression in the paintings of
Adolph von Menzel who portrays industrial activity as another form of
nature. Today however nature herself has
become industrialized.
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- Dimensions
- In the works of Simon Halfmeyer the observer
can follow these changes in the relationship between man and nature. This can
be demonstrated by individual works although an individual portrayal is, and
remains an interpretation. This can be clarified examplarily in retrospect of
the already mentioned expression ‘the projection’, an expression which contains
different meanings which often exclude each other. ‘Projection’, in the context of psychology,
means something completely different from in the field of mathematics. Nevertheless a work such as the slide
projection cross of Simon Halfmeyer 2002/2003, invites us to a divergence
between differing levels of the term.
- Four projection canvasses are placed in the
room upon the ground plan of a cross.
These canvasses are illuminated by four carrousel projectors. The canvasses display themselves not only
frontally but also through the reverse side due to their half
transparancy. The observer is made aware
of being surrounded by constantly changing motifs. Furthermore the subject matter of bushes,
trees and shrubs is rendered alien by the act of phototake, because Simon
Halfmeyer took the photograph at night using a flash light. This brings a strangeness into the
portrayal of nature , thereby increasing the difficulties in forming a projection in a psychological sense : the
unconscious transfer of personal wishes, feelings or imaginations on other
people or objects. The overproportional
flower images in this presentation appear to have lost their relation to the
anatomy of nature. In this exposure they
appear to originate more from a film than from
nature, which remains without depiction.
- At this point a further differentiation must be
introduced, that between material object and formal object.
- In scientific observation there is a
differentiation between these two objects, where the material object exists
prior to investigation, whereas the formal object emerges during the
observation process. As a result the
material object remains constant in different sciences, in contrast the formal object constitutes
itself differently depending upon the concrete investigation in a specific
scientific environment. Thereby the
expression ‘constitution’ is quite fitting, because the object is constituted
through observation. What is both,
‘material’ and ‘constitution’, opens the possibility of further
investigation or observation. This observationary perspective has been central
to the perception of nature since the development of modern science. How far this scientific perception of nature
has influenced or altered the everyday perception can only be estimated.
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- Techniques
- In the cycle of work called the ‘Park
Aquarelle’ a reflection upon this realization becomes possible. The basis for this work was a sequence of
slides, which Simon Halfmeyer had brought into digital form. We can see when using an image processing
programme on the computer, that in the digital representation, certain tufts of
grass are reproduced with an exact green tone.
The artist has erased this specific green tone from the picture, and
re-employed it as a colourful framing.
The concrete green colour tone was, for this purpose, mixed extra
and directly applied onto the wall. The wall sized drawings , using carbon on
paper, are a form of dialogue with the German Romantic Art. The background of the digital processing
would remain concealed, without the accompanying explanatory text, which also
changes the perception of this particular work.
What is, in this case, material
object, and what is formal object? Or
are there objects in art which come close to the condition of formal objects?
- This way of seeing can be justified in
reference to two particular sculptural works.
The sculptures with the pleasant title ‘Ich war noch nie in
Herrenhausen’ one made of steel and
the other from plywood. The work from
steel carries the epithet ‘Munster outdoors’ which title suggests its practical
useage. It was planned as an outdoor sculpture
for a public place. In reality the two
parts in Ollerhof simulate two parts of a hedge which has been broken in the
middle. The work has the effect at this
point of being like a ‚camouflage sculpture’, to use Simon Halfmeyers`own
words. ‘Camouflage sculpture’ is however
an expression with two meanings: Is the sculpture camouflaged or the object
which has been represented by the sculpture? Is the hedge deceiving us or the
sculpture? The potential of double
meaning lies at the core of much of Simon Halfmeyers’ works. In his art a well thought out scepticism is
displayed relating to the possibilities of contemporary art. He cannot limit himself only to portraying an
object, although at first glance his hedge sculpture appears to do precisely
that. In the context of the existing
local environment however the difference between the real object and its
portrayal becomes clear. The artist does not rearrange the surface of his
material, and does not even remove a clearly visible registration mark from this surface. Where does one find the orchestrated
artistry, on site or in the garden of Herrenhausen (the place named in the
title): In the object in dialogue with this artificiality, or in the
orchestrated art of the garden itself ?
The second sculpture with the same title relates to the garden design in
Herrenhausen. The form and size of the
hedge is orientated upon the examples of the baroque garden landscaping. That the hedge is subject to a lengthy
process of growth ,pruning and further growth is here addressed in the
sculpture. However the artistry of the
sculpture is completely different from the original botanic model. The structure of the artistic hedge allows a
glimpse through, but nevertheless bars the way simultaneously. It is portrayal
which simultaneously points to the act of portrayal. The form and design borrow the patterns of a
‘landscaped nature’ which is characteristic for the Baroque garden design. This
pattern is further elaborated. That becomes especially clear when the employed
pattern re-emerges in a so called cutting plotter folie. This adhesive folie is used for windows,
having the function of a blind, as is the case in baroque garden design,
however it gains a different meaning.
The camouflage does not pertain to being something else but functions
only as a blind. But the projected
shadow of this camouflage allows the original appearance to re-emerge: A
glimpse of floral patterns. The disguise is visible as a disguise in the
camouflage. It is a moment of discovering the concealed, which also earmarks
the spacially orientated sceneries which Simon Halfmeyer has recently brought
to fruition under the heading ‘Das Glashaus’ . Thereby the expression ‘spacially orientated’
must be understood in its deepest sense, because the surface areas penetrate
into the depths of the room itself, and, it appears almost natural that they
also draw the floor into our consciousness.
The observer of these ‘glasshouses’ is swallowed up by the house in a
double sense of the word. The walls are
in reality only walls, but function also as projection surfaces for the greenhouses. Barbara Buchmaier, in her catalogue
article(2), correctly points to the conclusion that these ‘Projections’ of
Simon Halfmeyer could raise important questions in a discussion of spacial
utility of contemporary museum and exhibition rooms. In which way is a shopping mall different
from the exhibition rooms of the Saatchi galleries ?
- In 2006 Simon Halfmeyer completed a work which
appears like a compendium of his collected works, and a summary of their
dimensions, proportions and techniques. The work ‘Cluster mit Erdhaufen’ shows in model form an art gallery with
baroque window arrangement brought onto glass using folie. A real mound of
earth is found in the first third of the gallery. In this we notice, on the one hand, a
reference to the artistic view of Land-Art, but on the other hand a reminder of
the ‘Rasenstück’ ( The Large Turf ) by Albrecht Dürer. Nature modelled into art or the art model
found within nature herself ? With which
point we round up our circle and a
question remains without answer.
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- (1) Eberhard Roters: Introduction, Catalogue ‘Was die
Schönheit sei, das weiß ich nicht – Künstler’ Theorie, Werk, Catalogue of the 2nd Biennale Nuremburg 1971, Cologne
1971, page 13
- (2) See catalogue Simon Halfmeyer: Glashaus, Junge Kunst
e.V. Wolfsburg 2006
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