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Thomas Schutte.


MARIAN GOODMAN GALLERY

Though Thomas Schutte and Stephan Balkenhol have much in common - they have been "competitors" since each was chosen for the 1987 "Munster Sculpture Project" - Schutte has stridently disputed any link to Balkenhol's sculpture. He regards it as repetitive and untheoretical, as Neal Benezra notes in a 1995 catalogue essay that accompanied Balkenhol's show at the Hirshhorn that same year. And yet Schutte's series "Die Fremden" (The strangers, 1992) 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 Balkenhol's figures: both artist's sculptures are allegorical and 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
, although Schutte's are more conspicuously surreal - public monuments with psychopathological psy·cho·pa·thol·o·gy  
n.
1. The study of the origin, development, and manifestations of mental or behavioral disorders.

2. The manifestation of a mental or behavioral disorder.
 import. Both artists have rejected steel in favor of traditional materials - Schutte adopted ceramic; Balkenhol wood - and each is an assiduous as·sid·u·ous  
adj.
1. Constant in application or attention; diligent: an assiduous worker who strove for perfection. See Synonyms at busy.

2.
 craftsman. Schutte's figures are in fact as compulsively repetitive as those of Balkenhol, though Schutte's seem more emotionally primitive than Balkenhol's expressively static works, whatever may be churning in them: they maintain the difference between social mask and inner life that Schutte's collapse.

The stranger is always implicitly us: a projection of how alien we feel to ourselves - our sense of dissociation exacerbated by the discrepancy between our external appearance and our inner reality, the former never adequately conveying the latter, despite all our efforts. Schutte's Fremden attempt to abolish this difference - to close the gap between social mask and private life - and thus to achieve a measure of existential authenticity. They brilliantly succeed in doing so, daringly conveying the mass depression of our age. A combination of the abstract and the figurative, each is carefully differentiated and socially typed by clothing and above all by facial characteristics. In a manner that strongly resembles ancient ithyphallic ith·y·phal·lic  
adj.
1. Of or relating to the phallus carried in the ancient festival of Bacchus.

2. Having the penis erect. Used of graphic and sculptural representations.

3. Lascivious; salacious.
 figures, each incorporates its own base, even as the base and the urn that accompanies it - a decisive differentiating factor that functions as a signifying attribute - are theatrically mounted on a steel platform with a high wooden pedestal. All have downcast down·cast  
adj.
1. Directed downward: a downcast glance.

2. Low in spirits; depressed. See Synonyms at depressed.


downcast
Adjective

1.
 eyes, which seem to seal them off from the world, and all stand at rigid attention - these are their emotionally defining, indeed their unifying characteristics.

Like Balkenhol's figures, Schutte's Fremden are decidedly German and medieval. They hark back hark  
intr.v. harked, hark·ing, harks
To listen attentively.

Idiom:
hark back
To return to a previous point, as in a narrative.
 to those sculptures mounted on the outside of cathedrals, at once participating in and standing above the community, as if to offer moral instruction. Much as did August Sander's documentation of German life, Schutte's figures reflect the great tension between social and individual identity. But this tension is resolved in their depression, which is at once collective and individual: however separated by class, they suffer from the same social disorder History:
Social Disorder is a NY Hardcore/Metalcore band which was formed in 1986 by Nicholas Vignapiano, Michael Trzesinski and Saul Colon. Joining the band soon after the initial grouping was Ritchie Gianonne, and later Steven Sallas completed the quintet.
. They look down and close their eyes to avoid contact with each other, in a conformist con·form·ist  
n.
A person who uncritically or habitually conforms to the customs, rules, or styles of a group.

adj.
Marked by conformity or convention:
 gesture of isolation. With a kind of innocent irony, Schutte's everyday figures powerfully convey the internal meaninglessness of modern life.

- DK
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Title Annotation:art exhibit at the Marian Goodman Gallery, New York
Author:Kuspit, Donald
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Sep 1, 1997
Words:458
Previous Article:Stephan Balkenhol. (art exhibit at the Barbara Gladstone Gallery, New York)
Next Article:Hiroshi Sugimoto. (art exhibit at the Sonnabend Gallery, New York)
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