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Sabine Hornig. (Reviews).


TANYA BONAKDAR GALLERY

In Germany modernism arguably found its fullest expression in architecture. In a land without a Picasso or a Matisse, a Malevich or a Rodchenko, it was figures like Mies and Gropius who supplied the Teutonic part in the great avant-garde fugue fugue (fyg) [Ital.,=flight], in music, a form of composition in which the basic principle is imitative counterpoint of several voices.  of the twentieth century. This may be one reason that contemporary German artists have consistently trained their cameras (postmodernism's favored tool) on the built environment. Architectural photography Based on the concept of capturing architecture in its most perfect form for posterity, architectural photography is marriage of photographic skill, technical aptitude, artistic vision and whimsical thinking.  has been coming out of Germany steadily for decades now, first from Bernd and Hilla Becher Bernd and Hilla Becher were a German photographer team and a married couple, best- known for their collection of industrial building images examining the similarities and differences in structure and appearance.

Bernd (1931 – 2007) and Hilla (b.
, then from the procession of star graduates from their master class at the Kunstakademie Dusseldorf. More recently a lesser-known generation of Germans--including Candida Hofer, Oliver Boberg, and Heidi Specker--has used photography to subvert the social claims of modernist architecture in new ways. In her second 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
 solo exhibition, Berlin-based artist Sabine Hornig built on these critiques while setting off in a different direction: mixing straight photography with archite ctural sculpture to create a suite of works with complex phenomenological import.

Hornig presented four new pieces here: one large photograph and three sculptures. Like her other recent photographic offerings, Hornig's Window with Door (all works 2002) is a life-size image of a window whose frame is congruent with the edge of the Perspex-mounted print itself. Literalizing the Albertian idea of the picture-as-window, Hornig's photograph looks strikingly like an aperture in the wall. On closer inspection, the highly detailed image yields more nuanced readings. It is full of deliberately disorienting dis·o·ri·ent  
tr.v. dis·o·ri·ent·ed, dis·o·ri·ent·ing, dis·o·ri·ents
To cause (a person, for example) to experience disorientation.

Adj. 1.
 reflections: Are we inside a building looking out or outside looking in? The unexpected absence of the photographer's silhouette among the murky forms adds to the confusion. This collapse of interior and exterior, so central to classic modernist architecture-think of Mies's Neue Nationalgalerie Neue Nationalgalerie at the Kulturforum is a museum for classical modern art in Berlin, with main focus on early the 20th century. It is part of the German National Gallery. The museum building and its sculpture garden were designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and opened in 1968.  in Berlin, probably Hornig's closest reference--raises questions about the role of built space in the formation of identity. Here Hornig's presence is reflected in a document of absence that speaks to the failure of modernist utopian promises of universal inclusiveness.

Modernism's shortcomings A shortcoming is a character flaw.

Shortcomings may also be:
  • Shortcomings (SATC episode), an episode of the television series Sex and the City
 are also brought to bear in Hornig's sculptures. Each re-creates a banal architectural form that provides its generic title. Bus Stop, Storefront, and Entrance are pared-down, meticulously stuccoed wooden constructions painted in washed-out pastel hues (Storefront is a hybrid of Hornig's mediums, incorporating a photographic-transparency "window"). Short on ornament and detail, these modernist-derived objects are long on eerieness. Their charge stems from Hornig's sensitive manipulation of scale: They have been reduced from the size of their source buildings so that the roofs come exactly to the artist's eye level. This is, of course, the point at which the architecture becomes functionless--at which the bus stop becomes a model and Hornig's constructions become art. Made uninhabitable, if only just barely, and stripped of the function that supposedly dictated their form, the buildings are transformed into objects of contemplation, and their latent strangeness emerges: We are left wi th hollow, impersonal, even brutal shells that conjure feelings of alienation and imprisonment Imprisonment
See also Isolation.

Alcatraz Island

former federal maximum security penitentiary, near San Francisco; “escapeproof.” [Am. Hist.: Flexner, 218]

Altmark, the

German prison ship in World War II. [Br. Hist.
. By subtly tweaking tweaking Vox populi Fine-tuning to produce optimal results  our most basic sensory perceptions, Hornig's smart, resonant work challenges both the supposed transparency of modernist architecture and, more compelling, its attendant claims to an unmediated Adj. 1. unmediated - having no intervening persons, agents, conditions; "in direct sunlight"; "in direct contact with the voters"; "direct exposure to the disease"; "a direct link"; "the direct cause of the accident"; "direct vote"
direct
 universality.
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Title Annotation:sculpture/photographique exhibition at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery
Author:Kantor, Jordan
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Jun 22, 2002
Words:520
Previous Article:Elisa Sighicelli. (Reviews).(photographique/painting exhibition Cohan, Leslie and Browne, New York)(Brief Article)
Next Article:Vik Muniz. (Reviews).(photography exhibition at Brent Sikkema)(Brief Article)
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