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Isa Genzken at Jahn und Jahn

Artist: Isa Genzken

Exhibition title: Collages

Venue: Jahn und Jahn, Munich, Germany

Date: October 24 – December 14, 2019

Photography: all images copyright and courtesy of the artist and Jahn und Jahn, Munich

Isa Genzken is one of the most important and influential artists of the last 40 years. Her innovative, multi-faceted, complex, and uncompromising work was presented in a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 2013, the artist’s first large solo show in the United States. It was also shown at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago and the Dallas Museum of Art. This comprehensive exhibition included assemblage, sculpture, painting, photography, collage, drawing, artist’s books, and film, as well as expansive installations, which not only highlighted Isa Genzken’s free utilization of multiple techniques and mediums, but also the radical shifts that she repeatedly executed in her long, uninterrupted career. Her artistic power is unique and explores the fundamental themes of modernity and urban architecture.

Isa Genzken achieved her first successes in the late 1970s as German and American artists such as Gerhard Richter, Joseph Beuys, Carl Andre, Sol LeWitt, Dan Graham, or Laurence Weiner dominated art-theoretical debates. She studied under Gerhard Richter at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf; her American colleagues she met at Galerie Konrad Fischer, where, in 1976, she was the first woman to have a solo show. Even at this early stage, Isa Genzken resisted the primacy of styles, making aesthetically perfect floor sculptures, hyperboloids, and ellipsoids from wood that filled the room and which, although inspired by minimalism, were not reducible to its dogmas nor to those of conceptual art. The sculptures were based on elaborate computer calculations and required a complicated production process. They were designed in such a way as to add a narrative level to that of pure form and the geometric shape became an object charged with content. Achieving a similar result but using diametrically opposed artistic means, Isa Genzken managed to produce Brutalist concrete sculptures in the 1980s. They are magically reminiscent of architectural models or they are called ‘Weltempfänger’ (short wave radio receivers) and suggest that a concrete block equipped with an antenna can also be an object filled with meaning. In contrast to earlier sculptures, the production process here could be greatly simplified and returned to the studio, which was important for the artist. During this period she worked more radically than anyone else on redefining what sculpture could mean. Within a discourse of fundamental questioning, this corresponded to an inherent logic whereby from the late 1990s she created complex narrative installations, in which materials from the consumer-oriented world of goods were brought together and transformed into impressive scenarios recalling film sets.

In the current exhibition we will present a selection of drawings from the year 1987, which come from a series that includes around 80 works on paper. By 1986 Isa Genzken had already created a group of plaster sculptures in which she dealt with contemporary architecture and to which these drawings refer.They are the result of the transformation of sculptural problems into the mediums of drawing and painting and lead to the aforementioned concrete sculptures. In 1986 the plaster sculptures were exhibited at Galerie Fred Jahn in Munich and the drawing series in 1987.

In her photo collages, Isa Genzken addresses narration once again and gives an insight into her life. Using self-portraits mounted sequentially, she exposes biographical gaps. An overlapping of film and collage is also evident here. In an interview Isa Genzken once said that she does not see herself as an explicitly political artist. However, Kaspar König, who exhibited her very early, was correct in saying that her art seems to be a socio -political statement which, considered anthropologically, always examines the right issue at the right time.

Isa Genzken, born 1948 in Bad Oldesloe, has taken part in international exhibitions since 1980: 1982, 1992, and 2002 documenta 7, IX and 11; 1982, 1993, 2003 Venice Biennale, 2007 solo presentation at the German Pavilion; 1987, 1997, 2007 Skulptur Projekte Münster; 2001 Istanbul Biennale; 2004 Carnegie International, Pittsburgh; 2016 Gropius Bau, Berlin. Further exhibitions took place in 2010 at Museion, Bolzano, 2009 at Museum Ludwig, Cologne, and Whitechapel Art Gallery, London.

-Christiane Friese

Isa Genzken, Collages, 2019, exhibition view, 25.10.–14.12.2019, © Jahn und Jahn, Munich, Photos: Ulrich Gebert, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2019

Isa Genzken, Collages, 2019, exhibition view, 25.10.–14.12.2019, © Jahn und Jahn, Munich, Photos: Ulrich Gebert, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2019

Isa Genzken, Collages, 2019, exhibition view, 25.10.–14.12.2019, © Jahn und Jahn, Munich, Photos: Ulrich Gebert, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2019

Isa Genzken, Collages, 2019, exhibition view, 25.10.–14.12.2019, © Jahn und Jahn, Munich, Photos: Ulrich Gebert, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2019

Isa Genzken, Collages, 2019, exhibition view, 25.10.–14.12.2019, © Jahn und Jahn, Munich, Photos: Ulrich Gebert, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2019

Isa Genzken, Collages, 2019, exhibition view, 25.10.–14.12.2019, © Jahn und Jahn, Munich, Photos: Ulrich Gebert, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2019

Isa Genzken, Collages, 2019, exhibition view, 25.10.–14.12.2019, © Jahn und Jahn, Munich, Photos: Ulrich Gebert, VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2019

ISA GENZKEN, Untitled, 2016, photographs, paper, card stock, bank coin, acrylic paint, glitter, metallic tape, paper tape, plastic tape, and plastic foil, 99 x 95 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2019, Courtesy of the artist and Jahn und Jahn, Munich

ISA GENZKEN, Untitled, 2016, photographs, paper, spray paint, acrylic paint, metallic tape, and plastic foil, 74 x 92 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2019, Courtesy of the artist and Jahn und Jahn, Munich

ISA GENZKEN, Fischcollage, 2001, collage, 80 x 60 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2019, Courtesy of the artist and Jahn und Jahn, Munich

ISA GENZKEN, Fischcollage, 2001, collage, 60 x 40 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2019, Courtesy of the artist and Jahn und Jahn, Munich

ISA GENZKEN, Architekturcollage, 2001, collage, 40 x 30 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2019, Courtesy of the artist and Jahn und Jahn, Munich

ISA GENZKEN, Architekturcollage, 2001, collage, 28 x 30 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2019, Courtesy of the artist and Jahn und Jahn, Munich

ISA GENZKEN, Architekturcollage, 2001, collage, 25 x 40 cm, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2019, Courtesy of the artist and Jahn und Jahn, Munich

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