OLAF BREUNING, We Never Know, 2010

OLAF BREUNING, We Never Know, 2010

42,4 x 29 cm / 16.72″ x 11.44″
colour print
edition 20
numbered
certificate of authenticity
not available

Breuning possesses a vivid imagination with little, if any, reserve. Breuning takes us considerably further into the contradictions of his own position within the Western contemporary art world: problems of human existence are seemingly addressed, but, one often wonders, on the basis of what lived experience? With an undeniably self-ironic undertone Breuning confronts us with the consequences of a media-modelled, Pop-culture society. For this work, Olaf Breuning employs his signature technique of juxtaposing photographic imagery to create a fantastical composition of human and animal hybrids arranged around the planet Earth.

History of prices
Benefit Edition, Los Angeles, USA $350.- August 2012
The Archive is Limited, Amsterdam € 580,- January 2019

MATIAS FALDBAKKEN, Untitled (Plastic Bag), 2010

 

MATIAS FALDBAKKEN, Untitled (Plastic Bag), 2010
42,4 x 29 cm / 16.7″ x 11.44″
archival ink-jet print, numbered, certificate of authenticity
edition 20
Benefit Edition, Los Angeles, USA                        € 280,- / $ 350.- July 2012

 

Intervention #21 – Matias Faldbakken

September 1 2012 – January 27 2013

“A small selection of the work of Matias Faldbakken (Denmark, 1973) will be showing in the museum’s Klaverblad spaces. Faldbakken is known for his radical, provocative attacks on existing traditional structures and value systems. You could call him a conceptual saboteur, who expresses his ideas through literature and visual art forms, such as sculpture, installations, photography and film. With works like Untitled (Locker Sculpture #2) and Untitled (Garbage Bag #21) his presentation combines a convincing aesthetic with provocation and vandalism.” Museum Boijmans van Beuningen, Rotterdam, Netherlands.

GLENN LIGON, ‘2000-2009’, 2011 [print]

 

GLENN LIGON,’2000-2009′, 2011
Epson Ultra Chrome K3 print on Museo Max 365 GSM paper
76,2 x  56 cm /  22 x 30 inch
edition of 30 + 5 AP + 5 PP
not available

 

History of prices offered and determined by:
LACMA, Los Angeles    € 3200,- / US$ 4000.- (members US$ 3600.-)   June 2012

Over the last three decades, Glenn Ligon has produced a substantial body of work engaged, as one critic has succinctly noted, with the “presence of the past in the present.” In this print Glenn Ligon has layered the figures of the years ten on top of each other.
Ligon draws from the aesthetic language and formalism of minimalism and the textual and philosophical modes of conceptual art, and enriches this all through his formative engagement with the modes of cultural studies and critical theory that have gained prominence since the 1980s.

GERHARD RICHTER, offset print, signed page [1980-1990]

Untitled, n.d. [ca 1980-1990]
27 x 21 cm
offset, book page, signed in black ink
Collection Kees van Gelder, Amsterdam
€ 1.200,- + € 12,- Track & Trace registered mail

In 1980-1990’s an Autographengruppe in Bonn started to collect signatures of people well-known in sports, literature and the arts. Not only postcards but also pages of books were cut out of art catalogues that were signed on the spot during openings or more often requested by the club members through mail. In the early beginning of this century the collector’s group decided to sell little by little a part of their collection on Internet through eArt.de and eBay.

“This work is part of an extensive unique collection of catalogue pages and various printed matter signed by Gerhard Richter. The way the signatures are placed on the reproductions create a distance and deconstruction of the illusion of the image. A phenomenon that is very similar to the signed Goslar Kerze poster of 1988. His signature positioned straight on top of the image as an ultra short painter’s gesture – opposite to the hard labour of his elaborate swept paintings – high lightens the gap between the reproduced and the uniqueness of each handwriting apparently integrated in the image.

One of the most important characteristics is the way the artist creates a distance between emotions possibly aroused by an image and the way a painting is blurr painted. Or in this case is reproduced and then disturbed by the gesture of a hand writing. The question about what the reproduced represents is put aside or at least put on hold by showing us two separate moments of two different ‘images’. This is opposite to what Roland Barthes called “punktum”. The depicted arouses direct emotions of recognition or disgust, caused by a meaning that pops up before we realize this. Nothing is in the way and these meanings suddenly appear to come out of the photo, id est here out of  the abstract picture. This is in contrast to what Barthes calls the ‘studium’, which refers to the longing of a search of meanings in a picture. In fact it is ajourning the pass of a judgement on what is seen until the addition sum is made. In his catalogue pages, each signed on loose prints, the two never seem to come together due to the different levels and meaning of each ‘image’. The abstract painting here reproduced in print never reconciles with the image of authorization a signiture stands for. The viewer has to look to the dimension of the reproduced being confronted again and again with the un-pictorial “standard sweep curtain” of Richter’s signature.”
Kees van Gelder, October 2006

 

WJM KOK, Maxi-Color, 2012 [7 prints]

WJM KOK
Maxi-Color (Ice Cream), 2012
various sizes, 7 parts, framed
print on paper
unique series of 36
Collection Utrechts Medisch Centrum, Utrecht, Netherlands
published by the artist                             € 3.000,-   October 2012

Each image of this unique series Maxi-Color in seven parts in size successively reproduced from circa stamp size to A4 comes from a children colour book called Maxi-Color. All together there are 32 different icons framed as ready mades.

VANESSA SAFAVI, After the Monument Comes the People, 2012

VANESSA SAFAVI, After the Monument Comes the People, 2012
100 x 70 cm
digital print
signed, numbered
edition 10 + 2 AP
published by Kunsthalle, Basel, Switzerland

 

Vanessa Safavi explores the meaning of monuments in various cultures. In the title ‘After the Monument Comes the People’ she calls attention to monuments that are commonly thought to embody “the ideals and goals” of a people. Instead, they mainly support the political goals of the state  —  a state that has monuments built by the people supposedly for the people. After the monument, a dictation by ideology comes the people, the community, which articulates its own goals.

In her wall sculpture ‘After the Monument Comes the People’, shown in the Kunsthalle Basel, Vanessa Safavi makes use of abstract, slim and upright forms that reflect the individual in a geometric abstract way. Curves or incomplete rings in these vertical figures represent ‘faces’. They become self-made symbols when they function as a reference to the individuality of each of the figures, which assembled together form a kind of ‘community’. Here two of them are shown in the print with the same title ‘After the Monument Comes the People’.