Mihai Pop on Fri, 13 Sep 2013 09:32:35 +0200 (CEST)


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[Nettime-ro] Adrian Ghenie and Navid Nuur - Plan B, Berlin



Galeria Plan B  
Â
 
 Â
Adrian Ghenie and Navid NuurÂ
'On the Road
to ... Tarascon'Â

Opening: 20 September, 17 -
22 h

20 September - 14 December, 2013
Tuesday - Saturday, 12 - 18
h
Potsdamer Strasse 77 - 87, 10785 BerlinÂ


Galeria Plan B
is happy to announce the exhibition 'On the Road to ... Tarascon', the
materialization of the conversation between the Romanian painter Adrian
Ghenie and the post-conceptual Iranian-born Dutch artist Navid Nuur,
unfolding over the last few years.

The two artists met in the context
of the galleryâs program and new episodes in their dialogue were
occasioned over time by group exhibitions and art fair presentations. This
is in tandem with the mission of the gallery, to be a locus of conversation
and collaborative research.

A first iteration of this project was
exhibited at the first edition of Art Basel in Hong Kong in May 2013 and was
awarded the Discoveries Prize. Guggenheim Museum's curator Alexandra Munroe
describes the project: "The installation by Navid Nuur and Adrian Ghenie
encompasses performance, sound, painting, and assemblage in a complete
environment that has keen art historical and critical relevance. It wrestles
with the history of modern painting while showing an exciting and fresh
perspective. Working collaboratively, the artists go beyond the constraints
of conceptualism and engage with more current languages of
art."

While Navid Nuur is concerned with articulating modules of
thought, where the abstract component of collective memory and intimations
of a possible future acquire a sensuous presence, Adrian Ghenieâs
paintings engage the invisible part of our past, where collective memory is
constantly challenged by mysterious, strangely prophetic actions and places,
occulted folds in the temporal linearity upheld by conventional histories.
Always poised between figuration and abstraction, the two practices converge
in looking at how both thoughts and oblivion materialize. The works in the
exhibition question the dematerialization of painting through a dialogue
between the figurative and the abstract, between representation and
prototype, between embodiment and its traces. It is an occasion for both
artists to challenge their positions: Adrian Ghenie steps forward in
researching the abstract side of the figurative, and Navid Nuur adapts his
conceptual toolbox to an investigation of traditional painting and
representation.

The two artistic discourses achieve new
potentialities in this encounter, through the direct access they offer one
another to work, to the physical and affective correlates of art-making.
This ranges from the performative dimension of their collaboration (a video
work shows Navid Nuur holding a microphone connected to a Marshall
amplifier, voicing out Ghenie's act of painting as it unfolds in front of
him) to the exchange of material (Nuur takes color samples from Ghenie's
painting in order to create another work which refines specific details of
Ghenie's work through enlargement and repetition; in exchange Ghenie
provides Nuur with a set of blue colours that he himself prepared). As a
next step, Navid Nuur adds an abstract layer of paint (starting from the
texture of a Van Gogh painting) on top of Ghenie's picture, searching for a
point of fusion between the two practices. At the end of the collaborative
work, Nuur assembles all the detritus of this shared process into
monocle-like instruments, viewing devices for their own material
opacity.Â

Excerpt from a conversation between Adrian
Ghenie and Navid Nuur, Berlin, July 2013Â
(to be published
in full as online reader on September 16 at
http://plan-b/reader)Â

N.N.: About two years ago we had this
discussion, when you told me: âI wish I had in my practice more room
to do abstract works because I'm intrigued by how color resonates and how,
for example, an apple looks better when it gets worse over time, how this
color has an energy.â At the same time, I was telling you how I wished
I had more of this visual historical practice, which is fixed on one thing,
because I do everything â thatâs mostly my practice. [â]
It's because you have to open your mindset to feed yourself from opposites
and different components and that's how we met most of the times: having
these conversations and hanging out in a way...
A.G.: .. from the outside
people might think we are the most unlikely artists to
collaborate...ÂIt's about research. People tend to simplify my case
saying that I'm a figurative painter. Of course, this is an excuse; I'm
interested in figurative painting, not in the image, but rather in how to
experiment with the figurative, to build it with different components.
Because the figurative traditionally became conflated with this sort of
imitation of reality, but it was the bricks you built this figurative
representation with, that I wanted to change, so as to incorporate most of
the research or experiments made in painting in the last century â
from avant-garde to abstract expressionism â and with that, to create
a new figurative.

A.G.: What intrigued me about Van Gogh is this
difference between the reality of his actual existence which was a complete
nightmare from top to bottom and Van Gogh the clichÃ, which is a
beautiful fantasy. [...] I have kept an eye on this subject for a long time,
since I discovered what Francis Bacon did with that painting of Van Gogh,
âOn the Way to Tarasconâ... Bacon actually understood the right
temperature of his existence and depicted it. [â] The Van Gogh I'm
trying to depict is one who is extremely angry; it's almost like the ghost
of Van Gogh who saw what happened with his works after his death and somehow
he's frustrated even after that!N.N.: I think that applies especially to
this series that we're doing: the painting that you've made, next to the
painting that I've made, inspired from his drawings. It was about pushing
even further this energy that was already there, by using your skills and a
computer in addition, and at the end, about analyzing from all these
different angles that elemental Van Gogh - which is really not enough out
there in the world I think. [â] I also looked at your strokes and how
I can fuse them in the paintings we're doing. We looked at it from different
perspectives: the subject, its historical reference and then we mix them up
in our own wayâ It was also interesting how our works evolved; it all
went quite naturally: you did one part, I did another part, or I started
with something and you came with another thing and that was because we both
had the same understanding of Vincent and his practice â so it was not
too weird or too difficult to find a meeting point for our
practices.


Adrian Ghenie (1977, Baia Mare, Romania) lives and
works in Cluj and Berlin. His previous solo exhibitions include: the Museum
for Contemporary Art, Denver; S.M.A.K Museum, Gent; the National Museum of
Contemporary Art (MNAC), Bucharest. His work has been included in group
exhibitions at the Palazzo Strozzi, Florence, San Francisco Museum of Modern
Art, the Francois Pinault Collection at Palazzo Grassi, Venice and the
Liverpool Biennial.

Navid Nuur (1976, Teheran, Iran) lives and works
in The Hague, The Netherlands. His previous solo exhibitions include: Centre
Pompidou, Paris; Parasol Unit Foundation for Contemporary Art, London;
Matadero Contemporary Art Center, Madrid; Kunst Halle Sankt Gallen and
Kunsthalle Fridericianum, Kassel. His work has been included in group
exhibitions at the 54th Venice Biennale, the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam,
Museion Bolzano, Kunsthaus Glarus, Stroom The Hague.Â


For
more information, please contact the gallery at [email protected] and
+49.1723210711.Â
Â

Galeria Plan B
 Â 
 

________________________________
  Â 
________________________________
  
Romania:
Str. Henri
Barbusse 59-61
400616 Cluj
Tel +40.740.658555
 Â Germany:
Potsdamer Strasse 77-87
10785 Berlin
Tel.
+49.172.3210711
 

________________________________
  
www.plan-b.ro |Â
[email protected] 
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