- The grown and the
constructed
- The
large wall drawing of Simon Halfmeyer in the Kunsthaus Essen distends itself
over several walls, it stretches itself and expands and proliferates until it
takes in the entire room. The drawing
with black pen onto a white background owns a graphic character, which allows
it to appear almost like a projection upon the wall space. Its lineal character gives an unsuspected
deepness to the wall, opens an enormous expanse in which the individual picture
elements appear to float weightlessly, partly interlace and overlay each other
in several layers. Simon Halfmeyer combines individual pieces of scenery and
allows them to collide, to encircle each other, to enter into intense
relationships or to distance themselves. His compilations scoop repeating
motifs from a pool which he manages to assemble into ever new pictures. The reoccuring pictorial elements establish a
thread to his earlier wall drawings, as for example the large wall picture Glashaus
(1) from 2006 , and connect the other
works in the exhibition. His way of working is similar to ‘Sampling’, a method
used in music, in which a new version of a song is produced through the
blending of different pieces of music or motifs in the mixer.
- The
graphical structure is the rhythmical basis underlying the wall drawing , which
makes possible and speeds up the dynamic of the individual motifs. The graphical structure constructs a folie to
which the motifs relate like the symbols on the virtual surface of the
display. As a plane surface and an open
picture space, the drawing oscillates between surface and the depths.
- During the raising of the characteristic of the wall
to appear as a folie, the image carrier dissolves into transparancy, as in the
touch up pen drawings glasses (2) made on glass panels, which either
lean side by side against the wall or,
are integrated into the wall drawing by being placed before, the drawing
is then enriched by the additional space. [1]Thereby a complex dalliance is initiated with the
image carrier itself, which withdraws its substantial form yet remains present,
an ambivalence between visibility and invisibility. The complex relationship between image
carrier and image, between significant and object, questions exemplarily the
conceptual work of Joseph Kosuth Clear,square, glass leaning from 1965,
which is made up out of four quadratic leaning glass plates, which are
respectively inscribed with one of the four words of the title. (3)
- The
picture called the Tafel, vorerst ohne Titel, (4) originates like a silhouette; A school
blackboard from the surface of which a palm motif has been sawed out. The image only becomes visible, and the
outlines become raised to central design principles, when seen in collusion with
the image carrier and the wall,the image having been there only in negative
form. The outline marks the borderline
between centre and periphery and builds, in this way, a space.
-
- In
his exhibition in Wolfsburg Simon Halfmeyer reaches over the arrangement of
wall expanse, and integrates his art into the pre-existing architecture of the
exhibition room, in that he re-adjusts the light by drawing a camouflage like
curtain over the large window, at the same time marking the boundary between
centre and periphery, and handling the window as a recepticle for image
projection, in the same way as when the wall becomes the passive recepticle for
his drawing.
- He
initiates a refined interplay between the visible and the hidden elements,
together with entering into a dialogue with the room itself as both picture
room and also exhibition room. (5) The
drawings, which are applied directly onto the wall connect their breaches and
provocations in abrupt dialogue with the architecture. They constitute their
own space and are yet constituted space. Simon Halfmeyer construes fantastic
room layouts and puzzling spatial arrangements also in his new drawings on
paper, completed during his stipend. The displayed rooms , and the
conceptualization, discovery and construction which are all intrinsic possibilities of drawing,
demonstrate that ‘the drawing can be the allusion of a World’, (6) as the
painter and sculptor Antonius Höckelmann described this potential. In the attempt to replicate the World, the
drawing aspires to cartography. In this
case the geometrical basic structure of the wall drawing allows us to think of
a fantastic road network, or on the abstraction of our urban condition. In the
same way these natural forms invite us to associations with organic artery
systems or with the tapestries of plant growth. In addition the basic
structures, together with the motif dazzle in their finely woven connection
between the works of nature and of man, between the natural and the
constructed. The partly recognizeable or suspected, partly cryptical pictorial
elements, which, as puzzling section, magnified details or positive-negative
role reversals, whether as unproportionally large or as curious fragments
making their readability more difficult, generate a multitude of double
meanings and ambivalences in a perpetual oscillation between abstraction and
recognition. To the central pieces of scenary used as motif, belong
skyscrapers, floodlight pylons and architectural elements such as hand
rails together with trees, often palms,
and reoccuring cacti and graphically ornamental foliage. The motifs from two
distinct groups are designated as almost
universally interwoven, the natural and organic together with the
artistic language of the architectural and the urban. They allow a relationship of being to appear
between the art of nature and mans`artificial construction, even that both
temporarily fall into one entity, when the cactus can become a mussel or the
latter seen from a slanted view can be seen as resembling a round stadium or
arena.
- The
structural similarity between the grown and the constructed shows itself in the
structural propinquity existing between, on the one side, constructed nature,
like for example the architecture of bees honeycombs, on the other hand the
earthquake proof skyscraper construction designed on the principles of a culm
or blade of grass; Or, in a rather larger context the similarly developed but
also developing structure of a city, as well as, the construed artificiality of
landscaped nature.
- Simon
Halfmeyer had already applied himself in
earlier works, and, in depth, with the artificial character of nature and the
conditioning of our perceptions of a reputed ‘nature’, whose artificiality has
been blended out, as in his large format carbon drawings on paper und es
bleibt ein ernstes grün, (7) , which appeared in 2004 after photographs of
the Ilmpark in Weimar, and which, through their composition and perspective,
make reference to the construed artificiality of the park. The artist demonstrates through his
conceptual encroachment the conditioning behind Mans`experiencing of nature.
Using the medium of digital picture processing he erases a green tone out of
the photographic work, which he then places around the drawing as a wall
colour, functioning like a colourfull ‘Passe-partout’. Through this extraction,
open spaces ensue, which remain to be filled by the observer, who then
construes his own personal view of the nature represented.
- Here
the tension laden dichotomy from nature and artificiality becomes conspicuous,
which is exemplarily demonstrated in Baroque park facilities, where plants are
handled as architectural models. The
artist gives a many sided commentary upon this paradox, with his life size
replica of the grown but also domesticated structure of a hedge, constructed
out of plywood. (8) The artificial
staging and the stage managed artificiality, in which the nature becomes a
backdrop, also builds the theme for the spatially extensive construction Kigelia,
(9) which displays, in undisguised form, the provisional character of
its`orchestration out of chipboard and roofing slates.
- The
human configurative intervention in the World as a specific form of annexation,
is also an essential element of artistic accomplishment. Thereby the symbolic work Der Wohnwagen,
(10) is a reference, inside of which a biotop has been developed, in which the
seeds flourish opulently under plant lights.
As a hermetic system, in which something develops and acquires form,
this mobile greenhouse becomes a symbol for the artist, in similar fashion to
the Kartoffelhaus,(11) from Sigmar Polke, which ironically compares the
artistic creativity with the germination of a potato, in which within the
darkness of a cellar something new germinates, grows and proliferates.
- In
its new function as a greenhouse Der Wohnwagen reminds us of the
glasshouses, the architecture of which belongs as one of the central motifs of
the artists imagery. The graphical structure of
their steel skeleton construction,
extensively used in the 19th century , is fascinating through its
dissolving into line networks. The glass roofs of the greenhouses, and shopping
malls, function like an umbrella, over specific self contained systems, and
Worlds of proliferation. In this way
they can also be interpreted as a metaphor for a museum or exhibition room, as
Barbara Buchmaier indicates her catalogue contribution to the Glashaus
exhibition. (12) In reminiscence of the elegant aesthetic of the 18th
and 19th centuries, during which the tendency of increasing
historicism and antiquarianism run parallel to exoticism. This is portrayed paradigmatically by the
palm tree, an ever reoccuring image, repeated in the Tafel, vorerst ohne
Titel, as well as in numerous
sketches on paper, on glass or on the wall. “Die nostalgische Palme” (13) is
also a repeatedly used central motif of the works of Marcel Broodthaers,
particularly during the last years of his creativity, “ As a décor conjuring up
the exoticism of the fading of the colonial epoch” and it condenses in itself
the sentimental “spirit of the Fin-de-siècle, which had no distinctive
stylistic imprint of its own, and
substituted borrowed historical inspirations”, as the art historian
Dorothea Zwirner writes. In 1974 and 1975 Broodthaers realized, in several
versions, the installation Un jardin d’hiver)(15), building a
wintergarden utilizing numerous palms and deckchairs enabling the observer to
recover from the exhibition whilst in the exhibition, an oasis , which unifies
the potential avantgardistic innovation with the melancholic and nostalgic
longing for tradition.
- Sigmar
Polke employs the palm using a similar symbolic power, although interlacing
this with ironic meaning in an enigmatic and subversive way. The romantic
feeling of the advertizing flyers and photo tapestries of the 1960’s, which
reflect a petit bourgeois escapism and the desire for the exotic, is satirized
in the photographs of the Palmenserie (16), from 1966. The palms are
made from objects of everyday life, as in the Zollstockpalme, the Brotpalme
and the Wattepalme, and finally Polke himself as a Menschenpalme ,
in white underpants wearing a wreath of white palm branches around his neck, a
dressed up idealization of the artist as an exotic being, a role in which he
appears to feel uncomfortable.
- Thefundamental human longing for idyll attaches itself mostly to nature, however
always a landscaped nature. This urge to shape the World is exemplarily
expressed in the
Schrebergartensiedlungen ( Colonies of allotment gardens with wooden
houses in the cities), in which each individual creates his own World. The
graphite drawings in the series Schrebergärten (17) are based upon
photographs taken during a stroll through an allotment colony. This is betrayed
by single details, whose light values are reversed, together with hard
contrasts. The drawing is, at the same
time, photography and its reverse. An
elementary principle of drawing with light is also used by Simon Halfmeyer for
his photogramms, created during his time in Essen, in which he arranged
different objects upon light sensitive paper, resulting in photography which is
direct, without medium and without negatives. With the photogramms, in a
technical and formal sense, he siezes
upon his characteristic work with pieces of scenery, thereby placing himself within
the time honoured tradition of elementary image processing. As a silhouette the wall drawing is, in a way
an archetype, and reminds us of the cave allegory of Platon, describing humans
in a cave, bound with their backs to the exit, watching shadows on the cave
wall, of objects carried to them by a fire outside. (19) Simon Halfmeyers’ wall drawings appear like
spellbound shadows, traces of projections or an imagined World, equally grown
and constructed.
-
- Deborah Bürgel
-
- (1) Glashaus, 2006, Pigment pen on wall, ca. 30
x 4,85 m, Junge Kunst e.V., Wolfsburg
- (2) Glasses, 2006, Laquer pen on glass, 145 x 22 cm, 140 x 30
cm, 170 x 43 cm, 164 x 30cm, 140 x 30 cm, 115 x 30 cm
- (3) Illustrations in Joseph
Kosuth : Investigationen über Kunst und Problemkreise seit 1965, Volume 1:
Proto investigations & Primary investigation (1965, 1966-1968), Lucerne
1973, page 9
- (4) Tafel, vorerst ohne Titel,
2006.
- (5) Ich war noch nie im
Herrenhausen/Folie, 2006 Cutting plotter folie, ca. 1,20 x 1,65m and 5 x 4,85m, Junge Kunst e.V.,
Wolfsburg
- (6) Quotation from: Eduard Trier:
Bildhauertheorien im 20 Jahrhundert, new edition, Berlin 1999, page 295.
- (7) …und es bleibt ein ernstes
Grün, 2004
Charcoal on paper, bonding colour, Measurements respectively 2,95 x 4,47 m.
- (8) Ich war noch nie in Herrenhausen, 2005, plywood, binding wire,
220 x 400 x 40cm.
- (9)
Kigelia, 2006 wooden scaffold, photocopies, ceramics, alluminium particles,
variable measurement, project room Cluster, Berlin
- (10) Der Wohnwagen, 2001, caravan, plant lamps, soil,
seeds, variable measurements.
- (11) Sigmar Polke: Kartoffelhaus, 1967, painted wooden scaffold,
potatoes, 250 x 200 x 200 cm. Block collection, Berlin, illustrations in
exhibition cat. Sigmar
Polke: Die drei Lügen der Malerei Bonn 1997, page 148
- (12) See: Barbara Buchmaier: Der
Austellungsraum als Glashaus, catalogue Simon Halfmeyer: Glashaus Junge Kunst
e.V. wolfsburg
- (13) Dorothea Zwirner: Marcel
Broodthaers, Die Bilder, die Wörter, die Dinge, Cologne 1997, page 151
- (14) Zwirner 1997, page 150
- (15) Prints of the installation in Palais des Beaux – Arts, Brussels 1974
in : Wilfried Dieckhoff (publisher) : Marcel Broodthears : Le
Poids d’une oevre d’art, Cologne 1994, page 174
- (16) Sigmar Polke :…Höhere Wesen befehlen, 1968 Folder with
drawings, offset prints and text pages, Edition Gallery René Block, Berlin,
work register Nr. 8 in : Jürgen Becker, Claus van der Osten (publisher),
Sigmar Polke : Die Editionen 1963 – 2000, Ostfildern-Ruit 2000, pages 26 –
33
- (17) Schrebergärten, 2003, Selection of 9 drawings,
Graphite on paper, respectively 30 x 42 cm
- (18) Photogramm, 2007
- (19) See: Platon: Politeia (Der
Staat, Über das Gerechte) 7th
book, Hamburg 1989, page 268 ff
- ______________________________________________
- Translation
by : Malcolm Cross ,
malcolm.cross@gmx.net
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