Magnus von Plessen: Mai 36 Galerie.The name Magnus von Plessen often comes up in discussions of new painting from Berlin--but how many people have actually seen his paintings? They've yet to he exhibited in Berlin itself. In 2001 they were shown at the Neues Kunstmuseum Luzern; then, last winter/spring, there was a small exhibition at K21 Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen The Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen is the arts collection of the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia. It is located in the state capital Düsseldorf. It has two houses - the K 20 for 20th century arts and the K21 for 21st century arts. near Dusseldorf. Now his most recent paintings have been shown in Zurich--the first-ever gallery exhibition for this painter, which might be explained by the fact that his production is limited to just a few paintings a year. Von Plessen's earlier works were predominantly portraits derived from photographs; the same was true here, although two of the seven works on view were not portraits. The copying of mechanically produced originals has been a matter of course at least since Pop art, but von Plessen's paintings raise new questions about the relationship between the photograph and its handpainted copy. In an interview published in the Dusseldorf catalogue, von Plessen recalls a moment in Joyce: As Stephen Dedalus Stephen Dedalus was James Joyce's literary alter ego, as well as the protagonist of his first, semi-autobiographical novel of artistic existence A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and an important character in Joyce's monumental Ulysses. looks out across the sea, his image of it is distorted by the memory of his mother dying, the green of the ocean becoming the color of her sputum sputum /spu·tum/ (spu´tum) [L.] expectoration; matter ejected from the trachea, bronchi, and lungs through the mouth. sputum cruen´tum bloody sputum. . Through the green of the water, his mother returns his gaze. Thus von Plessen says that "what we see looks back at us," quoting the art historian Georges Didi-Huberman but thereby aligning himself with feminist theorist the·o·rist n. One who theorizes; a theoretician. theorist a person who forms theories or who specializes in the theory of a particular subject. See also: Ideas, Learning Noun 1. of visuality Kaja Silverman, who, in her most recent book, World Spectators (2003), likewise speaks of the gaze of the image meeting that of the observer. She, too, insists that there is mutuality between the image and its observer, a mutuality that, if taken even further by way of certain precepts of phenomenology phenomenology, modern school of philosophy founded by Edmund Husserl. Its influence extended throughout Europe and was particularly important to the early development of existentialism. , makes us observers the true creators of reality: "Finally, it is we alone who determine whether the world will appear, and so Be, or languish in the darkness of non-Being. We bring things into the light by looking, in the strongest and most important sense of that word." Von Plessen gives us a hint of the worlds that might be created if the relationship between the gaze of the observer and the gaze of what is seen were a mutual one--if the photograph ceased to be an object and became a kind of subject itself, one that could reflect images back to us. Every observer who meets the gaze of what is seen is confronted anew a·new adv. 1. Once more; again. 2. In a new and different way, form, or manner. [Middle English : a, of (from Old English of; see of) + new with the question of space; for in this mutual gaze, perspective, with its hierarchically directed projection, loses its grip. How then should space be configured con·fig·ure tr.v. con·fig·ured, con·fig·ur·ing, con·fig·ures To design, arrange, set up, or shape with a view to specific applications or uses: , and with it time and motion? Even in the portraits, the space von Plessen creates tends to move. It is no longer perspectival, but then what kind of space is it? These questions become even more urgent for von Plessen in his most recent paintings, Ohne Titel (Treppe) (Untitled [Stair]) and Ohne Titel (Dachboden) (Untitled [Attic attic Floor of a dwelling contained within the eaves of the roof structure. The word originally denoted any portion of a wall above the main cornice (see entablature). ]), both 2003, which are no longer portraiture--although the cluttered clut·ter n. 1. A confused or disordered state or collection; a jumble: sorted through the clutter in the attic. 2. A confused noise; a clatter. v. room into which the latter grants a peek does contain a human figure--but depictions of interiors. Photography rarely touches on such questions. But for us, the observers, these are new questions as well, as different as the space yon Plessen allows us to glimpse. It shows us the distortions our perception can undergo, so long as we accept the gaze of the painting. Translated from German by Sara Ogger. |
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