Opening receptions: Thursday March 27
4 to 7 pm: 118 East 64th Street | 6 to 8 pm: 509 West 24th Street
Marianne
Boesky
Gallery
is
pleased
to
present
Saturnine
Swing,
an
exhibition
of
new
works
by
Matthias
Bitzer.
Saturnine
Swing
is
the
artist’s
first
solo
exhibition
at
the
gallery
since
joining
in
2013,
and
his
first
solo
exhibition
in
New
York.
For
Saturnine
Swing,
Matthias
Bitzer
will
use
both
the
uptown
and
Chelsea
gallery
spaces
to
present
his
drawings,
paintings,
and
sculptures,
and
multi-‐part
installations,
ultimately
engaging
the
two
spaces
and
the
works
contained
within
to
achieve
his
larger
project:
a
metaphysical
space
that
weaves
history,
memory,
and
narrative
into
a
multi-‐layered
realm
that
addresses
the
issues
activated
by
our
comprehension
of
reality.
Bitzer
frequently
looks
to
varied
scientific
and
literary
sources
as
departure
points
for
his
projects,
from
Euclidean
geometry
to
Emily
Dickinson.
For
this
exhibition,
Bitzer’s
particular
references
include
Aby
Warburg's
Mnemosyne
Atlas
and
Gilles
Deleuze
and
Felix
Guattari's
notion
of
the
rhizome
-‐
eclectic,
complementary
concepts
that
offer
rich
philosophical
and
aesthetic
holdings
pertaining
to
the
organization
and
presentation
of
reality.
Bitzer
mines
these
notions
to
convey
and
explore
the
idea
of
a
network
that
bridges
gaps
in
our
perception
of
time
and
space.
In
this
case,
that
network
collapses
art
historical
and
compositional
divides
-‐
traditional
portraits
are
disrupted
by
Constructivist
patterns,
image
and
text
become
one,
light
and
form
unite.
Through
the
juxtaposition
of
varied
references
and
mediums,
Bitzer
highlights
the
pendulum
that
swings
between
disparate
realms,
erasing
boundaries
precisely
through
his
emphasis
on
them.
The
exhibition’s
title
alludes
to
this
gesture;
the
grand
celestial
system
that
governs
the
universe
becomes
a
descriptive
metaphor
for
the
microcosm
of
the
artist's
own
thought
process.
A
delicate
pencil
work
on
wood
that
shares
this
title
exemplifies
Bitzer’s
task.
Here,
the
artist
displays
his
technical
virtuosity
with
a
ghostly
hand-‐drawn
geometric
pattern
that
oscillates
between
two
and
three
dimensions.
This
liminal
sense
of
perspective
is
further
emphasized
by
the
initially
incongruous
text
at
the
bottom
of
the
work:
"Saturnine
Swing"
in
small,
anachronistic
typewritten
letters.
The
juxtaposition
of
the
graceful,
expert
hand
of
the
artist
and
the
mechanically
reproduced
text
produces
an
aesthetic
and
conceptual
tension,
and
the
engagement
between
the
two
elements
–
image
and
text
–
is
strong
but
non-‐linear.
It
is
not
clear
which
describes
the
other,
only
that
they
both
participate.
The
discrete
tautology
of
this
work
epitomizes
the
artist's
greater
endeavor.
Indeed,
the
works
in
Chelsea
will
coexist
with
and
ultimately
realize
the
works
uptown,
where
Bitzer's
allegorical,
trace-‐like
archive
of
the
downtown
works
will
reside.
In
this
reflexive,
symbiotic
relationship,
spatial
and
conceptual
hierarchies
are
collapsed.
The
result
is
a
poetic
meditation
on
the
fluid
nature
of
reality
and
the
structures
imposed
to
define
it.
Matthias
Bitzer
was
born
in
Stuttgart,
Germany
in
1975.
He
graduated
from
the
Staatliche
Akademie
der
Bildenden
Künste,
Karlsruhe,
Germany
in
2004.
Since
his
first
solo
exhibition
at
Galerie
Iris
Kadel,
Karlsruhe
in
2004,
Bitzer’s
work
has
been
included
in
a
number
of
international
exhibitions
at
venues
including
the
Kunsthalle
Krems,
Austria
(2009);
the
Rosenblum
Collection,
Paris
(2011);
and
the
Palais
de
Tokyo,
Paris
(2012).
Bitzer
received
the
Nordhorn
City
Art
Prize
in
2007
and
the
Otto
Dix
Award
(Gera,
Germany)
in
2010.
In
2013,
the
artist
was
included
in
Jump
Cut
at
Marianne
Boesky
Gallery,
New
York.
Bitzer
currently
lives
and
works
in
Berlin.
For
further
information
regarding
Matthias
Bitzer,
please
contact
Ricky
Manne
at
[email protected]
or
212.680.9889.
For
press
information,
please
contact
Shayna
McClelland
at
[email protected]
or
347.744.5991.