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Florian Pumhosl: Galerie Krobath Wimmer.


What does Oskar Schlemmer's Triadic tri·ad  
n.
1. A group of three.

2. Music A chord of three tones, especially one built on a given root tone plus a major or minor third and a perfect fifth.

3.
 Ballet, 1916, have to do with the navigation of warships? Florian Pumhosl has explored this unexpected question in a new group of works. Pumhosl, an artist of great precision, is interested in the relationship between bodies and space, and he studies this relationship by way of superflat surfaces that he ultimately brings into relation with a superexact spatial balance: With just four works, Pumhosl succeeds in lending the small exhibition space of this Vienna gallery an air of breadth and elegance.

Pumhosl's footnotes to modernism seem austere aus·tere  
adj. aus·ter·er, aus·ter·est
1. Severe or stern in disposition or appearance; somber and grave: the austere figure of a Puritan minister.

2.
, almost monastic. His examination of the rules and vocabulary of the modernist image-language takes place on a substrate more often associated with rural amateurs than with the crowning achievement of avant-garde art: Pumhosl paints on glass, or better, paints behind it. And yet the verre eglomise technique from which Pumhosl's is adapted was used by Josef Albers Noun 1. Josef Albers - United States painter born in Germany; works characterized by simple geometrical patterns in various colors (1888-1976)
Albers
, among others. The avant-garde filmmaker Oskar Fischinger was a practitioner of the genre, as was the German artist, graphic designer, and leader of the Jena Kunstverein, Walter Dexel. The technique is intimately connected with the aspiration to modernize mod·ern·ize  
v. mo·dern·ized, mo·dern·iz·ing, mo·dern·iz·es

v.tr.
To make modern in appearance, style, or character; update.

v.intr.
To accept or adopt modern ways, ideas, or style.
 traditional crafts in the age of industrial production.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Pumhosl's finely differentiated and exactingly contoured personal method entails a very close look at abstract and reductionist re·duc·tion·ism  
n.
An attempt or tendency to explain a complex set of facts, entities, phenomena, or structures by another, simpler set: "For the last 400 years science has advanced by reductionism ...
 traditions of modernism while at the same time referring to representation. He allows himself a positively romantic impulse with the use of old glass plates, complete with air pockets, to somewhat counter the tendency to be all too picture-perfect. Lines on monochromatic--black, white, or gray--back-grounds can be associated with Schlemmer's stereometric bodies, whereas in the painting titled Battle of Manila Bay There have been a number of naval battles that occurred in Manila Bay. Most of these were battles between Spain and other countries. These include:
  • Battle of Manila Bay (1898) in the Spanish-American War.
See also
  • Battle of Manila - land battles
 (Turning Maneuvers) (all works 2005) the overlapping curves represent the movement of an American battleship battleship, large, armored warship equipped with the heaviest naval guns. The evolution of the battleship, from the ironclad warship of the mid-19th cent., received great impetus from the Civil War. .

With a suggestion of unity that is also taken up in the office space of the gallery, Pumhosl continues his aesthetic evaluation of modernism in Element, a thoughtful study of the material associations triggered by abstract paintings and of the way extreme formal reductivism re·duc·tiv·ism  
n.
See minimalism.



re·ductiv·ist n.

Noun 1.
 can produce powerful content. Pumhosl rigorously concentrates his work down to the founding grammatical principles of the modern image vocabulary and works unwaveringly to connect exemplary moments of the avant-garde--in architecture, design, or experimental film--along their lines of fracture and contradiction.

"Modernity and renewal," wrote the late curator Igor Zabel in his catalogue essay "Individual Systems" for the 50th Venice Biennale Venice Biennale

International art exhibition held in the Castello district of Venice every two years and juried by an international committee. It was founded in 1895 as the International Exhibition of Art of the City of Venice to promote “the most noble activities of
 in 2003, "by their nature are connected to ideas of a rational and ordered mode of thought, of a planned and effective kind of production, with ideas of a thoughtful use of space and resources, with ideas of a well-organized and equitable society." Pumhosl, too, has in mind historical situations, political realities, and concrete social structures when he executes his model studies on the relationship of space and bodies. He carefully combines exacting research into both aesthetic and social formations, translating them into an almost painfully clear language that asserts itself precisely in once-ambiguous areas. When Pumhosl packs his insights into one of his works, it is free from speculation, liberated from every convention; it is poetic and touching, it hits a nerve.

--Brigitte Huck huck  
n.
Huckaback.

Noun 1. huck - toweling consisting of coarse absorbent cotton or linen fabric
huckaback

toweling, towelling - any of various fabrics (linen or cotton) used to make towels
 

Translated from German by Sara Ogger.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Huck, Brigitte
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:4EUAU
Date:Mar 1, 2006
Words:526
Previous Article:Valentin Carron: Galerie Eva Presenhuber.
Next Article:Pilar Albarracin: Kewenig Galerie.(art exhibitions)
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