Showing posts with label Waldenbuch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Waldenbuch. Show all posts

23/04/24

Hommage à la France @ Museum Ritter, Waldenbuch - Works from the Marli Hoppe-Ritter Collection

Hommage à la France 
Works from the Marli Hoppe-Ritter Collection 
Museum Ritter, Waldenbuch 
5 May - 15 September 2024 

Jean Gorin
JEAN GORIN 
Composition spatio-temporelle multivisuelle n° 63, 1971
© Jean Gorin, Image: Gerhard Sauer

Hugo Demarco
HUGO DEMARCO 
Lumière, 1979
© Hugo Demarco, Image: Gerhard Sauer

It is not surprising that the manifesto of concrete art was published in of all places Paris in 1930. At that time the city was the capital not only of France but also of international abstraction. "Concrete painting, not abstract, because nothing is more concrete, nothing more real than a line, a colour, a surface", was how Theo van Doesburg defined the still fledgling art movement in the magazine Art concret. Even after 1945, the metropolis of Paris continued to emanate a radiance that drew any number of artists from home and abroad to the Seine. Here it was possible to build on the ideas of the pre-war period, while at the same time a new generation grew up that rejected intuition and personal expression in art and instead pursued an objective, scientific line.

The exhibition Hommage à la France is dedicated to the various approaches to concrete art in France as reflected in the Marli Hoppe-Ritter collection. The selection of works, which spans almost an entire century, clearly evinces the lively exchange of ideas within the closely-knit artists' community. The main thrust of the show is directed to paintings, which are flanked by reliefs, objects, lumino-kinetic works and installations. The greater part of the exhibits were created in the three decades after 1945, which in many ways reflects the enormous cultural upswing during that era.

In addition to a large number of brightly coloured paintings from Auguste Herbin to Leo Breuer, the exhibition presents a variety of pictorial objects whose colours, forms and structures are transformed in a dialogue with the viewer's movements. At the same time, in Victor Vasarely’s works one can experience how the father of Op Art used simple elements to set the picture surface in apparent vibration. The works of the Groupe de Recherche d'Art Visuel (GRAV) are also characterised by systematic thinking married with the spirit of research. François Morellet, for instance, used a random generator to create a picture with a shimmering effect. Finally, another section of the exhibition illustrates how the radical reduction of colour and form à la De Stijl and Bauhaus still inspires new avenues of design today.

With works by Yaacov Agam, Martha Boto, Leo Breuer, Daniel Buren, Geneviève Claisse, Sonia Delaunay, Hugo Demarco, Jean Gorin, René Guiffrey, Auguste Herbin, Gottfried Honegger, Jean Leppien, Vera Molnar, François Morellet, Aurélie Nemours, Francisco Sobrino, Jesús Rafael Soto, Gregorio Vardanega, Victor Vasarely, among others.

MUSEUM RITTER
Sammlung Marli Hoppe-Ritter
Alfred Ritter Strasse 27, 71111 Waldenbuch

03/05/23

Colours in a Square @ Museum Ritter, Waldenbuch - Works from the Marli Hoppe-Ritter Collection

Colours in a Square
Works from the Marli Hoppe-Ritter Collection 
Museum Ritter, Waldenbuch 
14 May - 17 September 2023 

This exhibition focuses on the topic of colour and the associated ways in which colours and elementary forms interact. On display are around 60 geometric abstract paintings, visual objects, and sculptures from the 1960s to the present day. They have been made by artists from 10 different European countries.

With works by Yaacov Agam, Kirstin Arndt, Werner Bauer, Max Bill, Bob Bonies, Hellmut Bruch, Geneviève Claisse, Daniel de Spirt, Rita Ernst, Hans Jörg Glattfelder, Ingo Glass, Camille Graeser, Gottfried Honegger, Imi Knoebel, Matti Kujasalo, Jim Lambie, Camill Leberer, Thomas Lenk, Richard Paul Lohse, Dóra Maurer, Vera Molnar, François Morellet, Aurélie Nemours, Miriam Prantl, Nelly Rudin, Diet Sayler, Reiner Seliger, Anton Stankowski, Klaus Staudt, Günther Uecker, Grazia Varisco, Peter Weber, Martin Willing, Shizuko Yoshikawa, Beat Zoderer.

Colour is one of the foremost means of artistic expression. And as is clearly demonstrated by the works presented here from the collection, this is especially true of non-representational art, in which colour is usually free of any symbolic value and stands entirely for itself.

But does the colour concept behind constructive-concrete works strictly obey its own intrinsic logic, as might be expected from art of this kind? Or are colours also sometimes employed in the broad field of geometric abstraction in a spontaneous, intuitive manner that ignores predefined rules?

The exhibition shows that both are possible. In addition to works in which colours and forms interact on a rational basis, others are on view that playfully break with the strict ideals of concrete systems of order, and that combine a grammar of geometric forms with idiosyncratic colour experiments. Some paintings above all impress the beholder by strong colour contrasts that create a visual sense of vibration in the picture surface. Others are radically monochrome - without any hint of monotony. And last but not least, the exhibits also include works made in part from glass or acrylic glass, which first unfold the true radiance of their colours in and through the ambient light.

A variant of the exhibition Colours in a Square has been on view at the Fondazione Marcello Morandini in Varese (IT) until 16 April 2023.


MUSEUM RITTER
Sammlung Marli Hoppe-Ritter
Alfred Ritter Strasse 27, 71111 Waldenbuch

02/05/23

Camill Leberer @ Museum Ritter, Waldenbuch - From the Echo Chamber

Camill Leberer. From the Echo Chamber 
Museum Ritter, Waldenbuch 
14 May - 17 September 2023 

The sculptor Camill Leberer is a paradigm shifter whose work broadly recalls painting and yet, in its various casts, is always the result of reflections on the way light and space are perceived. What distinguishes his work is his principle use of elementary, constructive design methods, without however working every permutation through to the end. Instead, Camill Leberer combines rational methodology with gestural, painterly and light-reflecting means to create the dynamic visual systems that make his work so unmistakable. As a result, his sculptures, paintings and wall pieces in metal, glass and paint create a wonderfully ambivalent effect: they appear simultaneously rational yet improvised, balanced yet expressive, material yet immaterial, and unapproachable yet sensual and atmospheric. And viewers also receive a central role here: they are encouraged to move in front of these works, to walk around and finally to immerse themselves in an “imaginary action space” (Camill Leberer).

Camill Leberer has for many years been represented by the Marli Hoppe-Ritter Collection, which includes a number of his works. The exhibition, which is the result of close collaboration with the artist, places special emphasis on works that underline the geometric, rational aspect of his practice. A cubic “housing” made of glass, the shape of the square in his metal pictures, and a serial presentation of coloured sheets of sandpaper are all examples of this. The exhibition is complemented by a selection of works that present Camill Leberer as also a draughtsman, photographer and poet.


MUSEUM RITTER
Sammlung Marli Hoppe-Ritter
Alfred Ritter Strasse 27, 71111 Waldenbuch


12/04/21

Heinz Mack @ Museum Ritter, Waldenbuch - Works in Light (1956–2017)

Heinz Mack. Works in Light (1956–2017) 
Museum Ritter, Waldenbuch 
8 May - 19 September 2021 

The ZERO co-founder, painter and sculptor HEINZ MACK has developed a staggering body of work over some 70 years of creative production. His pioneer work in the fields of Light Art, which he advanced in a series of visionary projects, exerts an unbroken fascination on us to this very day. Scarcely an artist of our times can, moreover, match up to him in terms of productivity and the diversity of his oeuvre. The sheer wealth of media he has explored – from Light Art, kinetic works and Land Art, to drawings, painting, and sculpture – is itself impressive. Yet despite this rich palette of expressive means, Heinz Mack has concentrated with remarkable tenacity on subjects he discovered early on in his art: investigations into light, and the dynamic power of structures.

Driven by the desire to be free of the dead weight of the past, and open to fresh new materials unencumbered by associations, Heinz Mack and his fellow ZERO artists ventured a radical new departure in the post-war period that still has a great resonance in art today. Already in 1958/59 he conceived his Sahara Project, and over the following years he realized, stage by stage, the various ideas that went into it. This spectacular project is presented in depth at the exhibition; among other highlights, the film Tele-Mack (1968/69) is shown, in which the artist is portrayed amid the desert expanses conducting experiments on the nature of light. And light is also the focal topic of the kinetic and sculptural works that are exhibited. Alongside three-dimensional works using modern materials, such as stainless steel, aluminium, and ribbed or acrylic glass, a selection of small marble sculptures is on view which underline the great importance the artist attaches to that classic genre. The exhibition is rounded off by Heinz Mack’s paintings, in the form of quite recent works in inks and on large canvases. In these Chromatic Constellations, as he calls them, light manifests itself through subtle chromatic tonalities and painted structures that set the picture surface in vibration.

This exhibition marks Heinz Mack’s 90th birthday and pays tribute to one of the great artists of our times. It gives a wide-ranging view of his work and brings together some 60 works whose poetic beauty shines out in the light. 

MUSEUM RITTER
Samlung Marli Hoppe-Ritter
Alfred Ritter Strasse 27, 71111 Waldenbuch
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