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Ripening on the rhine: the Cologne art world of the '80s.


In an Italian restaurant in Frankfurt, some blocks from where I live, a huge, bluish blu·ish also blue·ish  
adj.
Somewhat blue.



bluish·ness n.
 Martin Kippenberger Martin Kippenberger (b. 25 February 1953 in Dortmund- d. 7 March 1997 in Vienna) was an influential German artist whose penchant for mischievousness made him the focus of a generation of German enfants terrible  painting hangs on the wall. I am sitting at one of the tables there, with a stack of books and magazines from the '80s: a few catalogues, issues of Spex and Wolkenkratzer, and a twenty-year-old essay on "New German Painting" by the critics Wolfgang Max Faust and Gerd de Vries de Vries. For some persons thus named use Vries. . This is where I'm starting to write the article you're reading, about the creative scene that sprang up over two decades ago in a town some hundred miles away: Cologne in the '80s.

My own blurred memories are of little help. I recall some tumultuous openings, late nights in hotel lobbies and bars, a mixture of languages (mainly German and American English American English
n.
The English language as used in the United States.

Noun 1. American English - the English language as used in the United States
American language, American
), and a great sense of excitement. But I was just a visitor from abroad, with little grasp of what was really going on, and the decade was nearly over by the time I arrived. Will I be able to understand the Cologne of the '80s any better today? Fortunately, I have a few sources beyond the books on the table and the painting on the wall behind me.

Around 1980 Germany really had something to offer the international art world, the dealer Michael Werner tells me one morning last year a few hours before the opening of the Cologne art fair. A generation of artists who had already been working for a decade or more--Georg Baselitz, Sigmar Polke Sigmar Polke (born February 13 1941) is a German post-modern painter and photographer. Life and works
Polke was born in Oels in Lower Silesia. He fled with his family to Thuringia in 1945 during the Expulsions of Germans after World War II.
, Gerhard Richter Gerhard Richter (born February 9, 1932) is a prominent German artist. Richter is considered by some critics as one of the most important German artists of the post-World War II period and is also one of the world's most expensive, with his paintings often selling for several , and a handful of others--was starting to get attention abroad. This jump-started the market, says Werner. "Cologne is really rather provincial, and always has been. But the situation was new in that we had something to sell." According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Werner, one man had paved the way: Joseph Beuys Joseph Beuys (IPA: [ˈjoːzɛf ˈbɔʏs]; May 12, 1921 – January 23, 1986) was an influential German artist who came to prominence in the 1960s. , the artist, activist, and visionary professor at the Kunstakademie Dusseldorf. "Without Beuys," he says, "the German art world of the '80s would have developed very differently. He thought strategically, and his public appearances and performances, such as the trip he made to New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 without touching American soil, not only attracted great interest but created connections and opened new territories."

The Cologne of the '705 already boasted internationally established galleries, such as Werner's and Rudolf Zwirner's. There were also well-informed collectors in the area, an active experimental film scene, and an important electronic-music studio, run by Karlheinz Srockhausen, that attracted composers from all over the world, Nam June Paik Nam June Paik (July 20, 1932 - January 29, 2006) was a South Korean-born American artist. He worked with a variety of media and is considered to be the first video artist.[1] He is considered by some[2]  and John Cage Noun 1. John Cage - United States composer of avant-garde music (1912-1992)
John Milton Cage Jr., Cage
 among them. Even so, the preferred place of residence for artists was Dusseldorf, some thirty minutes away, with its academy, its Kunsthalle, and its lively art scene. "Dusseldorf used to be where artists would live and work; Cologne was the party town, and the place for dealers," says the artist Thomas Ruff Thomas Ruff (born 1958 in Zell am Harmersbach) is an internationally renowned German photographer who lives and works in Düsseldorf.

Thomas Ruff studied photography from 1977 to 1985 with Bernd and Hilla Becher at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf (Düsseldorf Art Academy).
, who still resides in Dusseldorf today. "Of course we would go to openings in Cologne, but we felt like outsiders because the kind of photographic work my colleagues and I were producing didn't get much gallery support during the first half of the '80s." But then something happened that isn't so easy to explain: Artists began to move to Cologne from all o ver Germany, and with them came new galleries. This industrial town on the Rhine, with roughly a million inhabitants
:This article is about the video game. For Inhabitants of housing, see Residency
Inhabitants is an independently developed commercial puzzle game created by S+F Software. Details
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame.
, emerged as not only the art capital of West Germany West Germany: see Germany.  but the world's most important city for contemporary art outside New York.

"It was completely clear where to go," says Max Hetzler, who had run a gallery in Stuttgart before relocating to Cologne in 1983. "I was doing shows with [Gunther] Forg, [Reinhard] Mucha, [Albert] Oehlen, and Kippenberger that had attracted attention, but to really reach out with my program, Cologne was very obviously the place." And reach out Hetzler did. Along with dealers like Paul Maenz and Monika Spruth, he became one of the major players in an increasingly international scene centered almost entirely around private galleries. Year by year more and more dealers--Daniel Buchholz, Gisela Capitain, Tanja Grunert, Rafael Jablonka, Jorg Johnen Esther Schipper, Sophia Ungers--set up shop. Ask any European artist where he or she wanted to show in the '80s, and the answer will be Cologne. Ask their American colleagues--Cindy Sherman, Jeff Koons Jeff Koons (born January 21, 1955), is an American artist. He is noted for his use of kitsch imagery using painting, sculpture and other forms, often in large scale. Life and art
Early life and work
, Peter Halley Peter Halley was born on September 24, 1953 in New York City. He is an abstract artist. Halley first came to prominence as a result of the geometric paintings rendered in intense day-glo colors that he produced in the early 1980's. , Robert Gober Robert Gober (born September 12, 1954) is an American sculptor born in Connecticut. He lives and works in New York City. He has had many exhibitions in Europe, North America and Japan. One of his most well known series of works was of sculptures of sinks. , Julian Schnabel--and they will say the same.

As Cologne became the Continental meeting place of choice for the international art world, the local scene developed its own social codes. Typical of the city's art circles were a certain rough sarcasm and a bullying directness. Kippenberger, for example, might be described as bad-mannered in a highly cultured way. His transgressive trans·gres·sive  
adj.
1. Exceeding a limit or boundary, especially of social acceptability.

2. Of or relating to a genre of fiction, filmmaking, or art characterized by graphic depictions of behavior that violates socially
 drinking habits were in no way unique; in fact they may have been moderate compared to Forg's. "You had to be really tough to make your voice heard," says Isabelle Craw craw

see crop (2).
, a critic who moved to Cologne in the late '80s. "I remember the Konigwasser bar, where you'd stand next to an aquarium with everyone squeezed together and discuss art matters ferociously. The frankness was at times brutal. Kippenberger, for instance, would always say what he thought, no matter how sexist or insulting. On an evening like that, I could count on at least one comment about my breasts. In the long run that was annoying." The critic and curator Francesco Bonami, then a young painter, remembers visiting Cologne often in the '80s: "For me the Cologne art world was like a sect with many factions, complete with leaders and gurus. Someone like Paul Maenz seemed unreachable to me. ... The Cologne art crowd was the ruling class. They were so socially sure of themselves that nothing could shake them. Excess and abuse were part of the game."

The so-called Bermuda Triangle Bermuda Triangle, area in the Atlantic Ocean off Florida where a number of ships and aircraft have vanished. Also known as the Devil's Triangle, it is bounded at its points by Melbourne, Fla.; Bermuda; and Puerto Rico.  of the Werner gallery, Walther Konig's bookstore, and the Broadway Cafe formed a kind of center, says Capitain, who worked for Hetzler before opening her own highly influential gallery. "It was all quite theatrical," she remembers. "Many artists saw their every public appearance as a kind of statement, every invitation card, catalogue, or title as an artistic comment, poking fun at or referring to other artists' shows or works." Cologne artist Michael Krebber remembers, "Kippenberger would refer to himself as the 'Chef der zweiten Liga' [boss of the second league], implying that Jiri Georg Dokoupil was the 'boss of the first league'--the artists' group Mulheimer Freiheit, which was associated with Paul Maenz. Kippenberger and his friends were with Hetzler." You had to show up at the Chelsea Hotel and a few other important restaurants and bars, for instance Hammerstein's. "Now I think the whole thing was like a never-ending soap opera soap opera

Broadcast serial drama, characterized by a permanent cast of actors, a continuing story, tangled interpersonal situations, and a melodramatic or sentimental style.
, with all the actors meeting offstage in this bar," Krebber remarks. "But the show didn't stop. People would sit at their tables, Dokoupil at his, Oehlen or Kippenberger somewhere else; you were surrounded by mirrors, and the moment you came in you were onstage. It was very exciting--for me it was too exciting. I thought I'd have a heart attack every time I went."

The question of what attracts creative people to a particular place at a certain moment has been the subject of lengthy urbanist treatises, notably Cities in Civilization (1998), in which Peter Hall says a lot about "innovative milieux" in general but mentions Cologne only en passant en pas·sant  
adv.
1. In passing; by the way; incidentally.

2. Used in reference to a move in chess in which a pawn that has just completed an initial advance to its fourth rank is captured by an opponent pawn as if it had only
, as one more city financially revived by the "cultural industry." What are the geographic, economic, and sociological conditions that make artistic, intellectual, and technological innovation possible? Most of Hall's theories have to do with rich networks of information; the "creative city," he suggests, can be described as a zone of turbulence, an "open system" that allows for heterogeneous inputs. But this seems too general for the specific case of Cologne in 1980. Perhaps the breakthroughs that emerged in the city over the next decade were not quite on the level of those produced in Athens ca. 300 BC, quattrocento quat·tro·cen·to  
n.
The 15th-century period of Italian art and literature.



[Italian, short for (mil) quattrocento, one thousand four hundred : quattro, four (from Latin
 Florence, the Silicon Valley of the '70s, or any of the other creative milieus that Hall examines. In fact some wo uld surely argue that the Cologne effect had less to do with artistic innovation than with marketing, packaging, and attitude. But Diedrich Diederichsen, a writer and editor for the Cologne music magazine Spex, echoes Hall: "It has to do with urban density," he says. "In Cologne people meet all the time. Compared to theater, for instance, visual art as we know it in galleries tends to have quite a limited performative per·for·ma·tive  
adj.
Relating to or being an utterance that peforms an act or creates a state of affairs by the fact of its being uttered under appropriate or conventional circumstances, as a justice of the peace uttering
 aspect, so the performance has to be provided by the crowd around it. Cologne has something stagelike about it, which makes it perfect for the art world."

Cologne had always been a dealer's town, but in the early and mid-'80s a new set of ambitious young galierists hung their shingles shingles: see herpes zoster.
shingles
 or herpes zoster

Acute viral skin and nerve infection. Groups of small blisters appear along certain nerve segments, most often on the back, sometimes after a dull ache at the site; pain becomes
. Daniel Buchholz was one of them. "I have to mention that my mother had a gallery, but for me it all really started with Walther Konig's bookstore, where I became an apprentice when I was sixteen. I stayed for three years. Next I went to New York, where I worked for Barbara Gladstone Barbara Gladstone is an American gallery owner and art dealer. She owns the Gladstone Gallery on W. 24th St in New York City, and she represents many popular contemporary artists, including Shirin Neshat, Sarah Lucas, and Matthew Barney.  for a while, but then I got homesick and went back to Cologne. Rudolf Zwirner had a space that was free, which was good for me because I could program that for a while." What makes this description of a dealer's early years typical of Cologne is the reference to the Buchhandlung Walther Konig. No one describing the Cologne art world fails to mention this quintessential art bookstore. "That's where I wanted to be," says Buchholz, "because that's where the artists were."

I ask Konig himself to explain the extraordinary success of his enterprise, which began, on a fairly modest scale, in 1969, with the opening of a bookshop on the Breitestrasse. It wasn't just the books that drew devoted patrons. "We provide neutral ground," says Konig, "In an art world of competing galleries, and of groups of artists who stand for incompatible things, a space like ours is very important because everyone can come here. And in fact everyone always has come here." He's not exaggerating: Over the decades the Buchhandlung has been the Cologne art world's most important meeting place. Artists, writers, dealers, and their friends even used to leave messages there for visitors to the city, as the safest and often the quickest way to reach someone who had just arrived in town. In 1981 the store relocated to a larger space on the Ehrenstrasse, drawing art-book enthusiasts from other cities. Konig acknowledges the popularity of his establishment without an ounce of arrogance: "What I'm saying has nothin g to do with vanity," he says. "It's rather to do with specialization."

Konig's shop may have been neutral territory, but this didn't stop him from inviting individual artists to present idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy  
n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies
1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group.

2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity.

3.
 events there. Over the years, artists including Gilbert & George, Joseph Kosuth Joseph Kosuth (born January 31, 1945 Toledo, Ohio) is an influential American conceptual artist.

Kosuth studied fine arts at the School of Visual Arts in New York City.
, Bernhard Blume, and Kippenberger designed the window displays. Kippenberger had a special relationship to the store: He would use it as his study for days at a time. He was also a frequent collaborator in Konig's publishing ventures. "I think we published seventeen books with Kippenberger," says Konig. The '70s and '80s were the golden age of the artist's book in Germany, and Konig was a catalyst. "One had to go to the bookstore and look at the new books," says Krebber. "Everyone would publish a book to go with their show. It was obligatory." A show wasn't even a prerequisite: When Kippenberger turned twenty-five, he threw a party, which he called "1/4 Century Kippenberger," and printed a book for the occasion. Konig remembers this frenetic publishing activity with mild nostalgia: "It really had nothing to do with promotional or careerist ca·reer·ism  
n.
Pursuit of professional advancement as one's chief or sole aim: "Rampant careerism, which makes many a work place a joyless site, was in check" Mary McGrory.
 purposes. We're talking about small, experimental books of perhaps sixteen pages, with a few pages on paper of some other color to pretend there was color involved. Cologne galleries still produce catalogues, but it was more fun when artists treated the books in a more innovative way. Now it's more about sales and raising the work's status."

When I ask Konig what for him were the most memorable events of the '80s, he's a little surprised by the question: People are usually more interested, he says, in the "heroic '70s." Indeed, the foundations of the Cologne art boom of the '80s were laid at least a decade earlier--Konig mentions the art fair, which started in 1969, and the history of ambitious work in electronic music and experimental film. Beyond this, he says, particular people were vital: "No matter what you think of Wolf Vostell as an artist, he played a key role in bringing people from different disciplines together. Every Thursday night he would invite people like Beuys and [Fluxus artist] Tomas Schmit Tomas Schmit (* 13th July 1943 in Thier close to Wipperfürth; † 4th October 2006)

Tomas Schmit died on 4th October 2006 at the age of 63 in Berlin Germany. The artist and author is one of the pioneers of the Fluxus movement of the early 1960s.
 to his house. He also published De-coll/age, a fantastic magazine. In a way, Fritz Heubach picked up from De-coll/age with his magazine Interfunktionen; it's amazing how many important essays and artists [Vostell] introduced." For Konig a more essential figure still was Kurt Hackenberg, Cologne's Kulturdezernent (minister of culture) and a g reat friend of contemporary art. The Vienna Actionists Otto Muhl and Hermann Nitsch Hermann Nitsch (b. 1938) is an Austrian artist who works in experimental and multimedia modes. He is associated with the Vienna Actionists, and like them conceives of his art outside traditional categories of genre. , for example, appeared as often as they did in Cologne because they knew they could count on Hackenberg's support: "He would say, 'I have this empty space, and here are two hundred marks.' That openness can hardly be overestimated," says Konig. Hackenberg also initiated a large exhibition designed to promote Cologne as an art capital. Organized by Kasper Konig, Walther Konig's brother, "Westkunst: Zeitgenossische Kunst seit 1939" (Western art: Contemporary art since 1939) opened in the Cologne Messe in 1981. Although the show included very little recent art, it provoked fierce criticism, attracted international attention from the likes of New York curator Henry Geldzahler Henry Geldzahler (1935, Antwerp, Belgium—August 16, 1994, Southampton, New York[1]) was a well-known curator of contemporary art in the late 20th century.  and London critic David Sylvester Anthony David Bernard Sylvester CBE, (21 September 1924; London – 19 June 2001; London) was a British art critic and curator. During a long career David Sylvester was influential in promoting modern art in Britain, in particular the work of Lucian Freud and Francis Bacon. , and put Cologne on the map.

"Westkunst" was followed by Kasper Konig's more experimental and controversial "Von Hier Aus" (From here out), in the Messe, Dusseldorf, in 1984. "Von Hier Aus" was intended to address the state of German art at the time. The show wasn't Konig's idea; it was something he slipped into, he says, when the original curator, Harald Szeemann Harald Szeemann (born June 11 1933 in Bern; died February 18 2005 in Tegna, Ticino) was a Swiss curator and art historian. Life
After studying art history, archaeology and journalism in Bern and Paris, Szeemann worked in 1956 as an actor, stage designer and painter, and
, "got cold feet." "I had just started teaching at the Dusseldorf academy," Konig remembers, "and I thought it was important to define my own territory." Perhaps this was why he failed to invite any of his fellow professors at the Kunstakademie (with the exception of Richter) to the opening and why, he explains in what must be an understatement, "The mood at the opening wasn't so great.... We even had to cancel the party." The purview The part of a statute or a law that delineates its purpose and scope.

Purview refers to the enacting part of a statute. It generally begins with the words be it enacted and continues as far as the repealing clause.
 of "Von Hier Aus" was defined as "art produced in Germany," a theme that was interpreted broadly enough to include artists such as Paik, the Belgian Marcel Broodthaers, the Frenchman Robert Filliou, and the Dane Per Kirkeby. "It was a postmodern sh ow in the strict sense," says Konig. "The exhibition design, by Hermann Czech, was highly ironic: It lacked center."

Even so, Konig's Dusseldorf extravaganza was certainly one of the most important contemporary attempts to define the art of the early '80s, bringing together artists from many cities and defining a new generation that saw Cologne as its center.

These two shows were among the only crucial ones mounted at public spaces in the '80s. The galleries led the way. Graw remarks, "The city's public institutions really played a very limited role. The whole scene was defined by the activities of the private galleries, supported by enthusiastic collectors, a few writers, and of course the artists themselves, who had a presence in the city at openings, parties, and bars. If any institutions did matter, they weren't in Cologne but a little outside it--in Bonn or Monchengladbach, for example."

Even if the galleries, with their tightly knit Adj. 1. tightly knit - closely and firmly integrated; "a tight-knit organization"
tight-knit

integrated - formed into a whole or introduced into another entity; "a more closely integrated economic and political system"- Dwight D.
 coteries of artists, were the driving force of the Cologne art scene, a number of critics and other mediators keep popping up in people's narratives. The writer and publisher Wilfried Dickhoff, for example, seems to have been one of the few who could bridge the gaps among the different factions; and writers for the magazine Spex, notably Jutta Koether, opened connections between the worlds of art and music. "If I try to remember why I used to go to Cologne so often in the late '80s, and finally moved there myself, it has to do primarily with artists, but also with the Spex crowd," says Graw, who, before relocating in Cologne, was living in Paris and working for the Frankfurt art journal Wolkenkratzer. "Even though I didn't know so much about music, I would always read Spex. Art and music met there in a unique way, and I really liked their experimental way of writing." Spex was primarily a music magazine, but it covered art as well. In fact it was cofounded, in 19 80, by an artist, Mulheimer Freiheit member Peter Bommels. Koether, herself a painter and writer, soon signed on and introduced new ways of addressing art in its pages: In her "Mrs Benway" column, which appeared in every issue from 1985 to 1990, she tried out every genre of art writing, from the straightforward to the delirious de·lir·i·ous
adj.
Of, suffering from, or characteristic of delirium.
. American artists
    A list by date of birth of historically recognized American fine artists known for the creation of artworks that are primarily visual in nature, including traditional media such as painting, sculpture, photography, and printmaking, as well as more recent genres, including
     like Raymond Pettibon Raymond Pettibon (born Raymond Ginn on June 16, 1957) is an American artist and sometime musician and lyricist.

    Known for his comic-like drawings with disturbing, ironic or ambiguous captions, Pettibon's subject matter is sometimes violent and anti-authoritarian.
     and Mike Kelley Mike Kelley could refer to:
    • Mike Kelley (artist)
    • Mike Kelley (baseball player)
    • Mike Kelley (American football)
    See also
    • Mike Kelly
    • Mike Kelly (baseball)
    • Kelley Polar
     were featured in Spex long before other European media noticed them. The magazine has also published on film, politics, and other subjects. "Since we were to a large extent financed by music advertising, we at least had to look like a music journal on the surface," says Diederichsen, who came on staff in the mid-'80s. But he also notes, "We did what we found interesting."

    Koether, Diederichsen, and Graw were also part of the link between Cologne and New York, which became increasingly lively and strong as the decade developed; they traveled back and forth, spending long periods on the other side of the Atlantic. With a slowness typical of the mainstream media, the New York Times Magazine pronounced Cologne a threat to New York's status as the world's art capital only in 1992, when everyone involved had long since realized that the golden age of the German city's art world was over. But even when it was at its peak--in around 1986, say--hardly anyone saw the relationship as a competitive one; it was more like a transatlantic love affair, with each gallery having a significant other overseas.

    It was in 1972. that Werner first encountered the work of Anselm Kiefer This article should be [ translated] from material at .

    Anselm Kiefer (born March 8, 1945, Donaueschingen) is a German painter and sculptor. He studied with Joseph Beuys during the 1970s. His works incorporate materials like straw, , clay, lead, and shellac.
    , who was and is a world unto himself. Bonami, asked to name his "gurus" of '80s Cologne, lists Polke, Forg, Kippenberger, and some of the most visible dealers but deliberately omits Kiefer, who, he says, "didn't really seem to belong to the Cologne art world, he was too heroic. Kiefer was more Black Forest, and his career could only work over in the US." Certainly Kiefer can be taken as emblematic em·blem·at·ic   or em·blem·at·i·cal
    adj.
    Of, relating to, or serving as an emblem; symbolic.



    [French emblématique, from Medieval Latin embl
     of the period's interest in painting, however, and he is a prime example (or rather the example) of a German artist of the '80s who rose to international prominence. In the late '70s Kiefer showed several times with Michael Werner, but in 1979 artist and dealer decided to go their separate ways. Werner remembers their last conversation vividly: "I always had this somewhat childish idea of running my gallery strategically: I would try first to get into the market in Switzerland, then in Holland, then Great Britain Great Britain, officially United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, constitutional monarchy (2005 est. pop. 60,441,000), 94,226 sq mi (244,044 sq km), on the British Isles, off W Europe. The country is often referred to simply as Britain. , and so on. I remember having th is argument with Kiefer about his not being strategic enough.

    His very last words Last words are a person's final words before death. For a list of well known last words, see or use the link at right.

    Last words may refer to:
    • Last Words, an Australian punk band (late 1970s - early 1980s)
     before leaving my office were, 'I'll show you what strategy is!"' And he did.

    Kiefer's Cologne dealer in the '8os was Paul Maenz, who, after a period of working with Conceptual and political artists like Daniel Buren Daniel Buren (born March 25, 1938 in Boulogne-Billancourt) is a French conceptual artist.

    In 1986 he created a 3,000 m² sculpture in the great courtyard of the Palais Royal, in Paris: "Les Deux Plateaux", more commonly referred to as the "Colonnes de Buren
     and Hans Haacke Hans Haacke (born 1936 in Cologne, Germany) is a conceptual artist.

    Haacke studied at the Staatliche Werkakademie in Kassel, Germany, from 1956 to 1960. From 1961 to 1962 on a Fulbright grant at the Tyler School of Art at Temple University in Philadelphia.
     in the late '70s, had turned to a new generation of painters. Besides Kiefer, Maenz showed a group from Cologne--Bommels, Dokoupil, Walter Dahn, Hans Peter Adamski, and a few others-who shared a studio building on a street called the Mulheimer Freiheit, from which they took their name. The success of that group and of a number of Hamburg painters, particularly Werner Biittner and Cehien, clearly evidenced a new interest in painting. Baselitz's and Kiefer's presence in the West German pavilion at the 1980 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
     was another marker of the trend, and in 1982, Faust and de Vries published Hunger flack Bildern (Hunger for paintings), which set the tone for the reevaluation of painting in the coming decade. Germany's so-called painting boom of the '80s--paralleled by the Transavanguardia in Italy and by neo-expressionism in the United States-- took many guises, and all were seen in Cologne. "What's new?" Faust and de Vries ask in the first chapter of their book: "What's new, in relation to the '60s and '70s, is that an entire generation of artists is turning to painting. The result is that recent developments are being reinterpreted: Through the young generation's massive rediscovery of painting, painters who were already around in the previous decade are being seen in a new context."

    It is certainly true that older German painters like Polke and Richter, and the group represented by Werner, including Baselitz, were now being reevaluated. Werner is eager to point our that his artists really had nothing in common with the new expressionists and believes that the painting boom only created misunderstandings about the truly interesting art then being made. Hetzler, too, remarks that an artist like Polke stood in no need of being reinvented by a younger generation. In the case of Buttner and Oehlen, in fact, Polke was partly responsible for their emergence in the first place, since he had been their professor at the Hamburg academy. Nevertheless, the focus on painting as a medium gave even established painters solid ground to stand on. Krebber, who was Baselitz's assistant for a year, contends, "Baselitz, I had thought, was as far up as you could get. But through this absurd painting thing in the early '80s, he and the other Werner artists were pushed up even one step farther."

    The Mulheimer Freiheir wasn't an artists' group in the modernist sense; it had no manifesto, for example. "We have no concept or program," Dahn wrote in 1981. "Our collaborations are based only on friendship and on our desire to do things that aren't normally seen as acceptable in art." The troika of Buttner, Kippenberger, and Qehien, all originally from Hamburg but regularly in Cologne through their affiliation with the Hetzler gallery, was not an artists' group in the strict sense either, but, like the Mulheimer Freiheir, its artists would often exhibit together and seem to have shared a sense of belonging. Oehlen says, "This exdring relationship, in which each person in the circle would try to surprise the others, was the most beautiful thing in my artistic life, Just to get a smile from Martin and Werner was much more valuable than doing something with other people." In the case of Oehlen and Kippenberger, their mutual admiration even led to a series of collaborative paintings, exhibited in 1981.

    Were artists working in other media totally eclipsed by the painting boom? "Well, I often had the feeling of being either too early or too late, it was hard to say which," says video artist Marcel Odenbach, who started exhibiting in the mid'-70s and worked in Cologne all through the '80s. "It wasn't that I didn't get shows, but in the early '80s the local audience and the media concentrated totally on the young painters." In fact Odenbach worked and showed all through the period, but when Zdenek Felix arranged a major show at the Museum Folkwang Museum Folkwang is a major collection of 19th and 20th century art in Essen, Germany. The museum was established in 1922 by merging the Essener Kunstmuseum, which was founded in 1906, and the private Folkwang Museum , Essen, in 1981, it was clear that something was wrong: "I had the downstairs space, and John Baldessari John Baldessari, (b. June 17 1931, National City, California) is a conceptual artist.

    His work often attempts to point out irony in contemporary art theory and practices or reduce it to absurdity. His art has been featured in more than 120 solo exhibitions in the U.S.
     opened upstairs on the same night. Fifteen guests came to my opening, and Baldessari only had six, one of them [his dealer] Ileana Sonnabend. Three months later, Dokoupil, Adamski, and the rest opened a painting exhibition. The museum was packed, and the papers were full of articles."

    To say that the Cologne art world of the '8os was dominated exclusively by painting is of course nonsense; this was the golden age of American appropriation art, and the Cologne dealers were quick to import the likes of Sherrie Levine Sherrie Levine (born April 17, 1947 in Hazleton, Pennsylvania, United States) is a photographer and conceptual artist. Much of her work is in the form of very direct image appropriation. , Peter Nagy, and Haim Steinbach. These were also years of triumph for Cindy Sherman, and Hetzler, when asked for his fondest memories, mentions the severalhundred-yards-long line for a Jeff Koons show in 1988. There were also German artists with interests beyond the brush. Rosemarie Trockel This article or section does not cite its .
    You can Wikipedia by introducing appropriate citations.
    Rosemarie Trockel (born 1952 in Schwerte, Germany) is a German artist, and an important figure in her country's contemporary art movement.
     managed to break through the thick wall of Cologne machismo machismo

    Exaggerated pride in masculinity, perceived as power, often coupled with a minimal sense of responsibility and disregard of consequences. In machismo there is supreme valuation of characteristics culturally associated with the masculine and a denigration of
     with works that broke with the equally thick paint typical of the zeitgeist. Spruth's "mild feminism," as Diederichsen puts it, showed not only in her gallery program but also in Eau de Cologne eau de Cologne (ō də kəlōn`), dilute perfume [commonly called cologne in English] introduced c.1709 in Cologne, Germany, by Jean Marie Farina. , an ambitious theoretical journal in the guise of a slick fashion magazine about women artists that appeared three times between 1985 and 1993. Meanwhile, without much fuss, a number of disciplined photographers who had graduated from Bemd Bec her's class at the Kunstakademie Dusseldorf began to get a foothold in the Cologne galleries. After a short break--otherwise known as the recession of the late '80s and early '90s--these artists started to make money on a scale that requires us to reconsider the very idea of the '80s as the decade of art commerce. But that's another story.

    So when did it end? "Well," says Herzler, "for me the opening of the Ludwig Museum in 1987 was such a disappointment that I would say it was the beginning of Cologne's decline, even if business was at its peak." Then at the very end of the decade came the recession and also the fall of the Berlin Wall, which turned the world's attention toward another German city. In 1990 many of the Cologne galleries collaborated successfully to produce an ambitious exhibition, "The Koln Show." But deep down, it seems, everyone sensed the denouement de·noue·ment also dé·noue·ment  
    n.
    1.
    a. The final resolution or clarification of a dramatic or narrative plot.

    b.
     was at hand. Of course it was also the beginning of something else in Cologne: institutional critique Institutional Critique is an art term that describes the systematic inquiry into the workings of art institutions, for instance galleries and museums, and is most associated with the work of artists such as Michael Asher, Marcel Broodthaers, Daniel Buren, and Hans Haacke. , the magazine Texte zur Kunst, the Christian Nagel gallery-in other words, the '90s. Not everyone left for Berlin, and in fact many of the artists, collectors, and galleries are still around. But some of the main protagonists of the previous decade had decided it was time to leave. "In the early '90s," says Hetzler, "one could either sit in Cologne and become depressed--or one co uld try something new."

    Daniel Birnbaum, a contributing editor A contributing editor is a magazine job title that varies in responsibilities. Most often, a contributing editor is a freelancer who has proven ability and readership draw.  of Artforum, is director of the Stadelschule art academy in Frankfurt and heads the institution's Portikus gallery.
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    Author:Birnbaum, Daniel
    Publication:Artforum International
    Article Type:Critical Essay
    Geographic Code:4EUGE
    Date:Mar 1, 2003
    Words:4416
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