Ben Brown Fine Arts Hong Kong is proud to present ASPECTS OF GERMAN ART (PART
ONE) - REVISITED, a comprehensive survey of German post-war and contemporary art,
featuring works by some of the most important and pioneering artists working in Germany
during this period. The exhibition brings together seminal paintings, photographs and
installations that provide an overview of the artistic, socio-economic and political concerns of
post-war Germany, a time period when these artists were reconciling with the trauma of war,
finding a national identity and constantly pushing the limits of modern and contemporary art,
through to the present day.
Germany, has spent his career exploring the post-war German identity, creating evocative,
tormented, crudely painted and uniquely coded works of art. Considered one of the most
influential and prominent living artists, Baselitz’s output includes painting, sculpture, works
on paper and prints. Rendering his figures, buildings and landscapes upside down is a
significant trope of Baselitz’s work, further referencing human and cultural trauma and
instability.
Max Beckmann (1884-1950) One of the most important German figurative painters of the
twentieth century, Max Beckmann’s work was highly informed by his harrowing experiences
during both World War I and World War II. His portraits are often characterized by their
fractured angularity, exaggerated and distorted human features, and amplified colours. In
the 1920s, Beckmann was associated with the Neue Sachlichkeit (New Objectivity)
movement, in which its members sought to represent the sordid and disaffected post-war
society of the Weimar Republic with critical and often satirical realism.
Günther Förg (1952-2013) Günther Förg, painter, photographer, sculptor and graphic
designer, is most highly regarded for his monochromatic lead paintings. These tactile,
minimalist works were achieved by wrapping lead over wood panels and stretchers and
layering them with acrylic in either one or two colours, the lead providing a rough ground for
his gestural work that was highly informed by modernism, through a postmodern lens.
Imi Knoebel (b. 1940) Imi Knoebel, a conceptual and abstract artist who has pursued
drawing, painting, photography, light projection, installation and sculpture in his illustrious
artistic career, has always sought to explore the relationship between space, colour and form
in his work. In the 1970s, Knoebel began applying gestural and geometric forms of primary
colours to plywood boards and metal plates, later developing a more minimalist approach to
his colour application.
Heinz Mack (b. 1931) Heinz Mack entered the canon of art history for his part in creating
ZERO, an artistic movement founded with Otto Piene in 1957. ZERO’s manifesto advocated
pure and limitless possibilities in artistic creation and marked a distinct departure from the
gestural language of European abstract expressionism. Mack’s early works are
characterised by a minimalist, monochromatic aesthetic and a reverence for the
transformative power of light.
Ernst Wilhelm Nay (1902-1968) Ernst Wilhelm Nay arrived at the height of his career in the
1950s when he shifted from expressive realism to total abstraction. Nay’s abstract paintings
were characterized by bold, flat, graphic blocks of pure colour arranged in rhythmic and
repetitive patterns across the picture plane, demonstrating his interest in the relationship
between music, rhythm, colour and form.
A.R. Penck (b. 1939) Painter, printmaker, sculptor and jazz musician, A.R. Penck was a
leader of the Neo-Expressionist movement and is renowned for his iconographic, simplified,
brutally rendered paintings. Throughout his career, Penck has developed a unique
pictography of geometric markings, patterns, totemic forms and figures that is wrought with
tension and ambiguity, his paintings and works on paper teeming with arrestingly graphic
imagery.
Sigmar Polke (1941-2010) Sigmar Polke’s oeuvre is marked by a fascination with
experimentation and manipulation of artistic media. Polke printed his photographs with
intentional haphazardness, underexposing, overexposing, combining negatives and
positives, repeating images, creasing wet photo paper, using chemical solvents to create
stains, and hand colouring blemishes made from a scratched negative. Polke would
continue this experimentation in his paintings, combining pigments, solvents, resins and
fabrics to produce extreme chemical reactions, forever questioning the rules of conventional
art making.
Gerhard Richter (b. 1932) Gerhard Richter has found success in every stage of his varied
artistic output, which has included both photo-realist and abstract painting as well as
photography. Richter’s work demonstrates an unyielding exploration of colour (or absence
of colour), texture, source materials, pictorial representation and abstraction—all the while
moving seamlessly between artistic styles and series that are entirely unique and
pioneering. Richter has garnered critical and commercial acclaim internationally and is
considered one of the most important living painters.
Dirk Skreber (b. 1961) Dirk Skreber’s disquieting paintings are characterized by a cool
detachment, fascination with catastrophe, and interest in the sublimity of mundane
landscapes, vehicles and architecture. His uncanny compositions set photo-realist elements
such as cars, trains and buildings against flat, abstracted backgrounds, often depicted from
an aerial viewpoint suggestive of surveillance cameras, further emphasizing a neutrality and
distance from such seemingly charged imagery.
Gert and Uwe Tobias (b. 1973) Gert and Uwe Tobias, Romanian-born twin brothers living
in Cologne, work as a collaborative producing fantastical and elaborate woodcut prints,
collages, ceramics, sculptures and installations. Taking inspiration from their Romanian
heritage, the brothers incorporate folkloric legend and traditional craft-based practices into
their work, while distinguishing it with references to contemporary culture and their own
idiosyncratic pictorial language.
Rosemarie Trockel (b. 1952) Rosemarie Trockel, a prolific female artist whose oeuvre
includes sculpture, collage, works on paper, film and “knitted paintings,” has always strived
to establish dialogues on gender politics, the role of female artists, the commoditisation of art,
distinctions between fine art and craft, and cultural taxonomies through her work. Trockel is
widely recognized for her signature “knitted paintings” which consist of machine-knitted wool
often stretched onto frames and patterned with provocative, computer-generated logos and
motifs, subverting the notion of traditionally female pursuits by altering the process and
materials.