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Svenja Deininger – Every Something Is An Echo Of Nothing
prima personale in Italia della pittrice viennese Svenja Deininger.
Comunicato stampa
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SVENJA DEININGER
EVERY SOMETHING IS AN ECHO OF NOTHING
19 MARCH – 29 APRIL 2015
OPENING RECEPTION, THURSDAY 19 MARCH, H 7:00 – 9:30 PM
FEDERICA SCHIAVO GALLERY
PIAZZA DI MONTEVECCHIO 16, ROME
Federica Schiavo Gallery is delighted to present Every Something Is An Echo of Nothing, an exhibition of new paintings by Svenja Deininger (Vienna, b. 1974). This is the artist’s first solo exhibition in Rome.
A painter’s painter, Svenja Deininger grapples with the grand archetypes found in the tangled history of painting. Her paintings are an accumulation of shapes with traces of denuded surfaces and proscribed borders perched around the edges of attenuated lines. Painting is a tug-of-war where outlined proportions are subtly carved out of units of contour formations dancing around layers of over-painted “miscues”. Depth and surface overlap in an endless variety of angled, rounded, squared, blunted or truncated shapes.
Such are her patterns; they’re neither the antagonisms of existential abstraction nor the missives of dogmatic painting but rather the unknown visions of her internal resources. As an antidote to technological overstimulation there is a heroic stability about them. Impelled by a state of sympathy and psychological redress the paintings are a compression of impulses. Endless combinations of unorthodox patterns push her geometric repetition one way or another. All the while anthropomorphic shapes emerge by the tension engendered between the interlocking forms. Considered within the parameters of serial groupings they converse amongst themselves and assert another spatial dimension to the architectural confines in which they hang.
A plight of every painter is the limitation of two-dimensionality and the stretcher. Deininger’s technique seems the antithesis of rigid formalism; unorthodox oblong geometries seem contrary to layers of shifting color silhouettes. Bold monochromes, sgraffiti surfaces, and shimmering viscous paints overlap. They are physical and subtle exemplars of mismatching colors reconciled by their idiosyncratic logic structure. The striations found in a denim colored work is in actuality a lapis lazuli pigment seeping through the weaves from the reverse side of the linen canvas. Underscoring this color field is a narrow line markedly brighter at the bottom, a solid within a density. When scaled up in larger canvases, biomorphic shapes are stacked teetering in space. Mediterranean blue, Ferrari red, burnt ochre, pearlescent whites, and beiges are reconciled by a dark monochromatic ground just holding them in place. Consistent to her palette, earth tones jibe with more ambient color, midnight blues merge into all encompassing blacks and the reverse occurs repeatedly. A boat-shaped canvas is neither homage to Ellsworth Kelly nor is it parody. Its merely another chapter of breaching influences that every painter must contend with; Tomma Abts, Etel Adnan, Mark Grotjahn (butterfly paintings), Mary Heilmann et al.
In confronting the pitfalls of the objectified medium itself Svenja Deininger is left to the fate of causality in her own paintings. Painting as illusion is the accumulation and arrangement of sequences in which they are placed in a descent of forms. To deal with the mind and reason a dynamic symmetry is necessary. With recognizable geometric order it’s the altered familiar that gives them their newness. After all, as implied in the exhibition title quote from John Cage, there is something to be gleaned out of nothingness.
Text: Julius Champaigne
Svenja Deininger was born in Vienna, Austria, in 1974. She lives and works in Vienna. She studied at the Academy of Fine Arts Münster in the class of Timm Ulrichs and at the Academy of Fine Arts Düsseldorf in the class of with Albert Oehlen.
Selected solo exhibitions: Federica Schiavo Gallery, Rome, 2015; Galerie Martin Janda, Vienna, 2013; Marianne Boesky Gallery, New York, 2013; Kunsthalle Krems, Austria, 2012; Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien, Vienna, 2011; Wiener Art Foundation, Vienna, 2011; Thomas K. Lang Gallery at Webster University, Vienna, 2009; Osterreichisches Kulturforum, Warsaw, Poland, 2008; Kunstraum in Essen, Germany, 2004. Selected group exhibitions: Kunstverein Cuxhaven, Germany, 2015; Atelierhaus Akademie der bildenden Künste Wien, Vienna, 2015; Temporäre Halle für Kunst, Linz, Austria, 2014; UMMA - University of Michigan Museum of Art, Ann Arbor, USA, 2014; Kunstverein in Hamburg, Germany, 2014; Parlament der Republik Österreich, Vienna, 2014; Kunstraum Innsbruck, Austria, 2014; WIELS Centre d’art contemporain, Brussels, 2013; Kunstmuseum Solothurn, Switzerland, 2013; 5th Beijing International Art Biennial, Beijing, China, 2012; Strabag Art Award, Strabag Art Lounge, Vienna 2012; Kunsthalle CCA Andratx, Spain, 2011; Kunstverein Schattendorf, Austria, 2010; Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna, 2010.
EVERY SOMETHING IS AN ECHO OF NOTHING
19 MARCH – 29 APRIL 2015
OPENING RECEPTION, THURSDAY 19 MARCH, H 7:00 – 9:30 PM
FEDERICA SCHIAVO GALLERY
PIAZZA DI MONTEVECCHIO 16, ROME
Federica Schiavo Gallery is delighted to present Every Something Is An Echo of Nothing, an exhibition of new paintings by Svenja Deininger (Vienna, b. 1974). This is the artist’s first solo exhibition in Rome.
A painter’s painter, Svenja Deininger grapples with the grand archetypes found in the tangled history of painting. Her paintings are an accumulation of shapes with traces of denuded surfaces and proscribed borders perched around the edges of attenuated lines. Painting is a tug-of-war where outlined proportions are subtly carved out of units of contour formations dancing around layers of over-painted “miscues”. Depth and surface overlap in an endless variety of angled, rounded, squared, blunted or truncated shapes.
Such are her patterns; they’re neither the antagonisms of existential abstraction nor the missives of dogmatic painting but rather the unknown visions of her internal resources. As an antidote to technological overstimulation there is a heroic stability about them. Impelled by a state of sympathy and psychological redress the paintings are a compression of impulses. Endless combinations of unorthodox patterns push her geometric repetition one way or another. All the while anthropomorphic shapes emerge by the tension engendered between the interlocking forms. Considered within the parameters of serial groupings they converse amongst themselves and assert another spatial dimension to the architectural confines in which they hang.
A plight of every painter is the limitation of two-dimensionality and the stretcher. Deininger’s technique seems the antithesis of rigid formalism; unorthodox oblong geometries seem contrary to layers of shifting color silhouettes. Bold monochromes, sgraffiti surfaces, and shimmering viscous paints overlap. They are physical and subtle exemplars of mismatching colors reconciled by their idiosyncratic logic structure. The striations found in a denim colored work is in actuality a lapis lazuli pigment seeping through the weaves from the reverse side of the linen canvas. Underscoring this color field is a narrow line markedly brighter at the bottom, a solid within a density. When scaled up in larger canvases, biomorphic shapes are stacked teetering in space. Mediterranean blue, Ferrari red, burnt ochre, pearlescent whites, and beiges are reconciled by a dark monochromatic ground just holding them in place. Consistent to her palette, earth tones jibe with more ambient color, midnight blues merge into all encompassing blacks and the reverse occurs repeatedly. A boat-shaped canvas is neither homage to Ellsworth Kelly nor is it parody. Its merely another chapter of breaching influences that every painter must contend with; Tomma Abts, Etel Adnan, Mark Grotjahn (butterfly paintings), Mary Heilmann et al.
In confronting the pitfalls of the objectified medium itself Svenja Deininger is left to the fate of causality in her own paintings. Painting as illusion is the accumulation and arrangement of sequences in which they are placed in a descent of forms. To deal with the mind and reason a dynamic symmetry is necessary. With recognizable geometric order it’s the altered familiar that gives them their newness. After all, as implied in the exhibition title quote from John Cage, there is something to be gleaned out of nothingness.
Text: Julius Champaigne
Svenja Deininger was born in Vienna, Austria, in 1974. She lives and works in Vienna. She studied at the Academy of Fine Arts Münster in the class of Timm Ulrichs and at the Academy of Fine Arts Düsseldorf in the class of with Albert Oehlen.
Selected solo exhibitions: Federica Schiavo Gallery, Rome, 2015; Galerie Martin Janda, Vienna, 2013; Marianne Boesky Gallery, New York, 2013; Kunsthalle Krems, Austria, 2012; Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien, Vienna, 2011; Wiener Art Foundation, Vienna, 2011; Thomas K. Lang Gallery at Webster University, Vienna, 2009; Osterreichisches Kulturforum, Warsaw, Poland, 2008; Kunstraum in Essen, Germany, 2004. Selected group exhibitions: Kunstverein Cuxhaven, Germany, 2015; Atelierhaus Akademie der bildenden Künste Wien, Vienna, 2015; Temporäre Halle für Kunst, Linz, Austria, 2014; UMMA - University of Michigan Museum of Art, Ann Arbor, USA, 2014; Kunstverein in Hamburg, Germany, 2014; Parlament der Republik Österreich, Vienna, 2014; Kunstraum Innsbruck, Austria, 2014; WIELS Centre d’art contemporain, Brussels, 2013; Kunstmuseum Solothurn, Switzerland, 2013; 5th Beijing International Art Biennial, Beijing, China, 2012; Strabag Art Award, Strabag Art Lounge, Vienna 2012; Kunsthalle CCA Andratx, Spain, 2011; Kunstverein Schattendorf, Austria, 2010; Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna, 2010.
19
marzo 2015
Svenja Deininger – Every Something Is An Echo Of Nothing
Dal 19 marzo al 21 aprile 2015
arte contemporanea
Location
FEDERICA SCHIAVO GALLERY
Roma, Piazza Di Montevecchio, 16, (Roma)
Roma, Piazza Di Montevecchio, 16, (Roma)
Orario di apertura
da lunedì a sabato ore 12 -19
Vernissage
19 Marzo 2015, ore 19.00
Autore