|
The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
 |
Established in 1996 |
|
Sunday, September 21, 2025 |
|
Sigmar Polke: We, the Petty Bourgeois - Contemporaries Opens at Hamburger Kunsthalle |
|
|
Sigmar Polke, Can you always believe your eyes? (Wir Kleinbürger) , 1976. Gouache, Lack- und Acrylfarben, Tabak, Zinksulfid und Cadmiumsulfid auf Papier auf Leinwand, 207 x 295 cm. Privatbesitz, Hamburg © Sigmar Polke, Photo: Peter Schälchli.
|
HAMBURG.- At the centre of this exhibition is a long-neglected and only recently reassembled body of work by Sigmar Polke from the period 19741976: Wir Kleinbürger Zeitgenossen und Zeitgenossinnen (We, the Petty Bourgeois Contemporaries). The ten-part series of unusually large works on paper occupies a very important place in the artists oeuvre due to the unique variety of figures, traces, signs and quotations from popular imagery it contains: echoes of Capitalist Realism from the 1960s blend with precursors to Polkes chemical and optical experiments with colour in the 1980s as well as the political themes that were to become increasingly prominent in his work from the mid-1990s onwards. As such it provides a panoramic view of art and everyday life in the Federal Republic of Germany in a period marked by hippie culture, the new womens movement and terrorism. Taking the Kleinbürger series as its starting point, the exhibition for the first time provides insight into the whole of Sigmar Polkes artistic output in the 1970s a topic hitherto neglected by art historians. Films, photographs, drawings and paintings, supplemented by documentary material and source images, serve not only to illustrate the diversity of his work across a range of media but also to present a completely new as a result of being long ignored image of Polke in the era of sex, drugs and rock n roll.
Many of the works in this series were made on a farm the Gaspelshof near Willich in the Lower Rhine area, where other artists also came to work and friends came to stay. Polke had close connections to both the Cologne/Düsseldorf and the Berne/Zurich art scene, and was also a professor at the Hochschule für Bildende Künste in Hamburg. A further focal point of the exhibition is therefore Polkes collaborative practice: key works by colleagues and companions Katharina Sieverding, Achim Duchow and Candida Höfer, to name just a few reflect the prevailing trend towards working and living together, while individual responses to the issues confronting artists at that time are equally visible.
From March 2009 onwards, the Kleinbürger series, which takes its title from Hans Magnus Enzensbergers much-discussed 1976 essay Von der Unaufhaltsamkeit des Kleinbürgertums (On the Inevitability of the Middle Classes), will be presented to the public for the first time in over thirty years in this exhibition at the Hamburger Kunsthalle. The unusually long duration of the show (ten months in total) aims to set a trend toward deceleration in the fast-moving world of art exhibitions and to promote sustained engagement with the Kleinbürger series and the historical cultural context of the 1970s.
The three consecutive and complementary exhibitions, focussing on Clique, Pop and Politics respectively, will reveal interesting new connections and unexpected insights into Polkes oeuvre; the Kleinbürger works will be presented alongside different neighbours each time.
Curators of the exhibition: Dr. Dorothee Böhm and Dr. Dietmar Rübel; at the Hamburger Kunsthalle: Dr. Petra Roettig
|
|
Today's News
March 15, 2009
MFA Boston Exhibition Features Masterpieces from the World's Greatest Collections
Reclaimed: Paintings from the Collection of Jacques Goudstikker Opens at the Jewish Museum
First Edition of Superman Achieves $317,200 at Auction
Sigmar Polke: We, the Petty Bourgeois - Contemporaries Opens at Hamburger Kunsthalle
MoMA Announces an Exhibition of Paintings, Drawings, and Prints by Belgian Artist James Ensor
Splendors of the Empire: Napoleon and the Imperial Court on View at Chateau de Malbrouck
National Gallery of Australia Announces Arrival of the Degas Pastel, Recently Purchased at YSL Sale
Art and Love in Renaissance Italy on View at the Kimbell Art Museum
artnet Launches Prints Sale Featuring Works by Bacon, Chagall, Lichtenstein, and Other Artists
Seattle Art Museum Announces 2009 SAM Next Series Featuring Corin Hewitt and Heide Hinrichs
LACMA Presents West Coast Premiere of First Comprehensive Franz West Survey in U.S.
Portland Museum of Art Announces Call of the Coast: Art Colonies of New England
Six Shooters and Mistology Highlight Upcoming Mid-Week in Mid-City Events
Toledo Museum of Art Announces Strategic Restructuring
Brandywine River Museum Hosts 38th Annual Antques Show, May 23-25
Jay A. Clarke Appointed Manton Curator of Prints, Drawings, and Photographs at the Clark
In Full Bloom: The Pysanky of Folk Artist Iryna Bilianska on View at the Ukranian Museum
Wexner Center Heralds the Start of Baseball Season with &th Year of Rare Baseball Films
Corporate, Private Art Collecting Symposium at Sheldon March 28
Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Program to Present Program about Operation Babylift
Saint Louis Art Museum Announces Free Art After 5 Performance
|
|
|
|
|
Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography, Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs, Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, . |
|
|
|
Royalville Communications, Inc produces:
|
|
|
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful
|
|