Helmut Federle: Peter Blum.Two hundred of Helmut Federle's works on paper--working drawings and autonomous improvisations, the earliest from 1969--made for a stunning record of the artist's development from a painter of landscapes, however abstract, to a painter of abstractions oddly evocative of landscapes. Federle acknowledges the influence of Agnes Martin Agnes Martin (March 22, 1912 – December 16, 2004) was a Canadian-American painter, often referred to as a minimalist, although she considered herself an abstract expressionist. , whose abstractions also have a landscape implication (she has recognized the effect of her native Saskatchewan prairie on her works). But Federle's are much more dynamic and unsettled than Martin's, no doubt because his point of departure is the mountain terrrain of Switzerland. The jaggedness of Ohne Titel (fur Viviane), ca. 1976, can also be seen in Fur Kirchner + Davos, 1980. It's registered more simply in the eccentric so-called field works of the mid-'90s, where the cubist angles of the earlier landscapes have flattened and an ambiguous planarity remains. Even when the artist explicitly invokes a landscape, as in Sun over Red Sea, 1981 (which, with all its gloom and geometry, has a certain affinity Certain Affinity is an American video game development studio based in Austin, Texas, in the USA. It was founded in 2006 by Max Hoberman and a small number of other ex-Bungie employees and other industry veterans. with early German Expressionist ex·pres·sion·ism n. A movement in the arts during the early part of the 20th century that emphasized subjective expression of the artist's inner experiences. ex·pres landscape worship), or Sils Maria, 1990 (Nietzsche's magic mountain), this sense of planar "trickiness" remains. In conversation, Federle has spoken of self doubt; it becomes cleat he means something resembling Cartesian doubt. As with Descartes, at the bottom of his self-questioning is the cogito--in this case, the abstract fundament fun·da·ment n. See anus. fundament 1. a base or foundation, as the breech or rump. 2. the anus and parts adjacent to it. of visual thinking that is as much an activity of pure intellect as of philosophy: With Federle, the tension between image and abstraction--signaled by the Mondrianesque character of much of the work--is secondary to the nuances of shape, line, color, and surface. (Tree for Mondriaan, 1980, painted the same year as Fur Kirchner + Davos, reminds us that Mondrian's abstractions are rooted in geometrical "reprises REPRISES. The deductions and payments out of lands, annuities, and the like, are called reprises, because they are taken back; when we speak of the clear yearly value of an estate, we say it is worth so much a year ultra reprises, besides all reprises. 2. " of landscapes rural and urban.) Federle is at bottom a purist pur·ist n. One who practices or urges strict correctness, especially in the use of words. pu·ris tic adj. mystic; Thuner See (fur Ferdinand Hodler) (Thun Lake [for Ferdinand Hodler]), 1991, recalls that Swiss master's landscapes but emphasizes the abstraction embedded in the Hodlers' natural purity. Rationale und Irrationale Struktur (fur Ferdinand Hodler "Zur Warheit") (Rational and Irrational Structure [for Ferdinand Hodler "In Quest of Troth"]), 1991, makes this point decisively as well. Federle's art is in fact an attempt to integrate rationality and irrationality while revealing their difference. Ultimately, perhaps, he wants to demonstrate that human feeling and pure form are inseparable--like the Symbolist sym·bol·ist n. 1. One who uses symbols or symbolism. 2. a. One who interprets or represents conditions or truths by the use of symbols or symbolism. b. conviction that every form is a pure expression of an emotion (Gauguin's example was the "weeping" willow). Such Symbolism is ironically evident in H wie Helmut, H wie Hoffnung, H wie Hartherz, H wie Hetero (liegendes H), H wie Heimweh, H wie Hass (H as in Helmut, H as in Hope, H as in Heart, H as in Hetero [Horizontal HI, H as in Homesick, H as in Hate), 1981, an abstract self-portrait with a perverse link to Arthur Rimbaud's synesthetic syn·es·the·sia also syn·aes·the·sia n. 1. A condition in which one type of stimulation evokes the sensation of another, as when the hearing of a sound produces the visualization of a color. 2. "vowels equal colors" formula. Like the most convincing "purist" work, this drawing--even more ironic than the famous painting in which Federle presented a swastika swastika Equilateral cross with its arms bent at right angles, all in the same rotary direction, usually clockwise. It is used widely throughout the world as a symbol of prosperity and good fortune. as an abstraction--is absurd (and provocative). It suggests that Federle, like the pioneering abstractionists, conceives of pure art as a sacred space sacred space, n space—tangible or otherwise—that enables those who acknowledge and accept it to feel reverence and connection with the spiritual. where the homeless self can find sanctuary. Zwei Zeichen uber der Erde (Two Signs Above the Earth), 1981, and Innerlight II, 1988, hint as much. In pure abstraction, what other light is there?--DK |
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