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BJORN DAHLEM.


GALERIE LUIS CAMPANA

Once a year the Kunstakademie Dusseldorf opens its doors, offering a glimpse of the students' work. One finds that the young artists seldom work in a truly autonomous or innovative manner; often their work looks plagiarized pla·gia·rize  
v. pla·gia·rized, pla·gia·riz·ing, pla·gia·riz·es

v.tr.
1. To use and pass off (the ideas or writings of another) as one's own.

2.
 from their teachers'. And so it was remarkable that at the open studio a year ago, a number of curators and critics spoke with unreserved enthusiasm about an installation by the then-twenty-four-year-old Bjorn Dahlem. Although a student of Hubert Kiecol, Dahlem's installation had more in common with the material aesthetic of Georg Herold combined, perhaps, with that of Thomas Hirschhorn Thomas Hirschhorn (born in Bern, 1957) is a Swiss instalations artist.

In the 1980s he worked in Paris as a graphic artist. He was part of the group of communist graphic designers called Grapus.
, making for something unexpected and innovative. The enthusiastic response to that work led to exhibitions at the Museum voor Moderne mo·derne  
adj.
Striving to be modern in appearance or style but lacking taste or refinement; pretentious.



[French, modern, from Old French; see modern.]

Adj. 1.
 Kunst Arnhem in Holland (with the more established German artists Isa Genzken Isa Genzken (born 1948, Bad Oldesloe, Germany) is an artist based in Berlin.

Genzken studied at the Hamburg College of Fine Arts[1] from 1969-1971, the Berlin University of Fine Arts[2] from 1971-1973 and Dusseldorf Art Academy[3] from 1973-1977.
 and Dirk Skreber Dirk Skreber, (1961- ) b. Lübeck, Germany contemporary artist who lives and works in Düsseldorf.

Dirk Skreber is one of the leading contemporary German artists. For Skreber, natural disasters, car crashes and near-miss train accidents become monumental icons of beauty.
), at the Schnitt Ausstellungsraum in Cologne (with another up-and-corner, Michel Majerus), and in the project space of the Museum Fridericianum in Kassel.

The title of the installation that constitutes Dahlem's first gallery exhibition, Club Horror Vacui, 1999, with its reference to youth culture, situates the work in a pop context while evoking the sense of social interaction among people with shared interests. In the corner of the gallery stands a wooden construction with several beer cases stacked on top of one another, from which one could help oneself at the opening. At the same time, the term "horror vacui" signifies nor only awe before the void, but also the active teleological tel·e·ol·o·gy  
n. pl. tel·e·ol·o·gies
1. The study of design or purpose in natural phenomena.

2. The use of ultimate purpose or design as a means of explaining phenomena.

3.
 efficacy of nature (i.e., the idea that nature acts to fill a void), a cornerstone of Aristotelian physics. In many works, Dahlem thematizes the discrepancy between the apparent objectivity of science and its mystical potential, for example in two earlier installations, Schwarzes Loch (Black hole), 1997, or Bermudadreieck (Bermuda Triangle), 1999, in which mysterious disappearances are framed within the context of natural science. In his current exhibition Dahlem has placed a woo den lattice construction with forty-eight neon tubes in front of the gallery window. On entering, one is immediately struck by the full force of this wall of light. The crudely constructed wooden lattice--out of which the other elements of the installation are also constructed-negates any claim to formal perfection in favor of a direct and dynamic immediacy. Another element of the installation, which is relatively sparse for Dahlem, is an office chair by Charles and Ray Eames, in front of which he has built out of wooden lattice a polymorphous polymorphous /poly·mor·phous/ (-mor´fus) polymorphic.

polymorphous

polymorphic.
 structure in the form of a large desk or table, reminiscent of some architectural vision by Buckminster Fuller. (Borrowings from the utopian, pseudoscientific pseu·do·sci·ence  
n.
A theory, methodology, or practice that is considered to be without scientific foundation.



pseu
 constructions of Fuller turn up often in Dahlem's work.) Table and chair stand on an octagonal oc·tag·o·nal  
adj.
Having eight sides and eight angles.



oc·tago·nal·ly adv.

Adj. 1.
 pink carpet, the only color accent in the exhibition. Opposite this arrangement of furniture, Dahlem set up a large black panel made from thick Styrofoam pieces on a freestanding wooden scaffolding to which he attached a black carpet. As a visual analogue of the black monolith in Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), the large black surface takes on a pronounced physical presence in the space. Dahlem's affinity to 2001 is not only grounded in his interest in science fiction. Of decisive relevance for Dahlem's work is the film's central theme--the relationship of man to science and technology. For all its roughly construed trashiness, Dahlem's current exhibition possesses a remarkable elegance and penetrating visuality--further testament to this young artist's estimable es·ti·ma·ble  
adj.
1. Possible to estimate: estimable assets; an estimable distance.

2. Deserving of esteem; admirable: an estimable young professor.
 talents.
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Author:Dziewior, Yilmaz
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 1, 2000
Words:569
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