FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE - PATRICIA
SWEETOW GALLERY
PATRICIA
SWEETOW GALLERY
is pleased to welcome German artists Irmel Kamp & Joachim Bandau in
FASCINATION ARCHITECTURE, photographs, sculpture and watercolors. The installation
will interweave Kamp and Bandau artworks into architectural rhythms. Exhibition
dates are March 29 through May 13, 2006. Reception for the artists is April 6,
5:30 - 7:30 p.m.
ÒHouses
can develop a personality, can take on an appearance, begin to speak and lead
an independent life. The passage of time imprints stories of development on the
houses, just like wrinkles. Alterations seem like blemishes and wounds. Changes
of use can disturb the psyche of a house just like an assault. In short, houses
can live.Ó 1
German
photographer Irmel Kamp (b. 1937) has documented Modern Architecture of the
late 1920Õs through the 1930Õs in nine European cultural capitals. Her resume
includes Tel Aviv, New Building, 1930-39; the zinc covered houses of the
Belgium-German border region; Brussels, Les Annees Trente, Neues Bauen, New Buildings in
Brussels, and now regions in the former Eastern Bloc countries. Kamp has
devoted her multiple decade career photographing International Style
Architecture in regions overlooked for their modern architectural treasures.
Through her singular approach of pure, cool neutrality, Kamp has preserved an
historical record informed by contemporary tableau. Her photographic projects
have enlivened debate, and encouraged preservation of buildings designed by
leading architects of the era. Her last project, Les Annees Trente, Modern
Architecture in Brussels, began an International Tour at the
Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum in Aachen.
In
this exhibition Kamp will present new photographs from The Netherlands, Italy,
The Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland.
Irmel Kamp's meticulous process necessitates that she produce her own
gelatin silver prints. The photographs are not retouched, toned or otherwise
altered from their original intention. As a photography master, Irmel is able
to preserve the same directness in style and thought, as International Style mirrors.
Kamp has exhibited in museums in Hungary, Germany, United States, Israel,
France, Belgium, Switzerland, Estonia, Czech Republic and Austria.
Joachim
Bandau
(b.1936) belongs to the protean group of German artists, along with Gerhard
Richter, Joseph Beuys, and Imi Knoebel, who came out of the Kunstakademie
DŸsseldorf in 1961. Bandau has had an uninterrupted schedule of major museum
and gallery exhibitions all over Europe dating back over forty-five years.
Groundbreaking
is his exploration of form; Bandau in the late 70Õs moved the sculpture to
ground and underground. As with
Carl AndreÕs development of the floor sculpture, and Bruce NaumanÕs concrete
casting of the empty space under his chair, this new art form ÒBodenskulpturÓ,
Floor Sculpture, gave Bandau an independent and important legitimization. The
first series of works following the automobiles exhibited in Documenta 6, 1977,
were ÒBunkersÓ, lead covers over wooden cores. The next stage were ÒSŠrgeÓ (coffins),
and ÒMumienkŠstenÓ (boxes for mummies), continuing his referent to the human
form, and condition.
Friend
and colleague Walther Konig in 1976 discussed with Bandau an exhibition
catalogue of the Centre Pompidou, ÒBunker ArcheologieÓ. This exhibition influenced
many important artists including Micha Laury, Micha Ullmann, Gruber, in
attempting to reconcile, acknowledge, and overpower the question of postwar
Germany, the ÒzeitgeistÓ. If the Bunker receded into the ground could it be
buried? In the 80Õs Bandau
expanded his work on the floor sculpture into lead sea and lead fields, that
today are in the Ludwig Museum collections of Cologne and Aachen. Bandau
continued to explore and define sculpture in many important exhibitions
including, ÒInside. Outside. An Aspect of Contemporary SculptureÓ at the MUHKA
in Antwerp in 1987.
In
1983, Bandau began making large format watercolors that arose from the densely
hatched sculptorÕs drawings. Measuring several inches, or feet, the paintings
resonate the lines of his sculpture, a slow precise brushstroke of various
widths and pigment densities layered on heavy deckled paper with dense Japanese
brushes. The veil of pigments form a slow volume defined by layers of fine pigment
lines.
In
the current exhibition PSG is pleased to present new watercolors, and a series
of small sculptures that were exhibited at the Fuhrwerkswaage Kunstraum Kšln,
September 2005. "Diverse Bonsai," the exhibition's title, focused on
miniature sculpture, as paraphrased by Manfred Schneckenburger, Tectonic
Bonsai
- playful configurations that open up into broad passages and high slits, with
subtle modulations.
Joachim
Bandau is represented in over 35 museum and public collections.