BERLIN.- Berlin Art Projects announces the opening of Jörg Lohses solo show, Id love to be Albert Oehlens friend with new work by the Leipzig painter.
Wilder, more impetuous and more immediate than ever, Jörg Lohse returns to the art world after an almost three-year hiatus from the Berlin art scene. In the rural seclusion of Upper Bavaria, far from the scene and discourse, the artist developed a series of new, monumental works. The titles are provocative and loud as fanfare: Tomorrow is over yesterday, Its a shame that concrete doesnt burn and My beginning is your end begging the question: To whom is this declaration of war directed? The battle is being waged against lightness, the easily-digested, content itself it is heavy fare, not easy to swallow. Jörg Lohse plunges into the adventure of painting like a man obsessed, for the sake of painting. He creates himself, and he creates obstacles. For him, it is about painting and only the painting the painting that can exist and hopefully endure in the eyes of the artist and viewer. Lohse paints his soul from his body and hopes for a piece of immortality.
His painting is rapid and extremely aggressive. Everything is massive, loud and supremely colorful: subjects dissolve into abstract surfaces; corrosive yellow and scrawled signatures disrupt and create and almost unbearable disharmony. The title and the depicted often clash and run counter to one another. They negate any mutual relationship in terms of content, and refuse to give even the illusion of a reality. What remains are colors, shapes and surfaces; any content comes directly from the viewers own power of association.
All of this is exactly as Lohse intended it. Lohse searches for and uses the element of surprise, rebels against traditional painting rules and ordinary viewing habits. He does this without pause, never asking himself the question: Can I really leave it like that? Lohse aims to irritate, confuse, overcome obstacles and limitations and create something new. He consciously claims this freedom, keeping a distance from the art world in order to create a space far away from the art market, the scene, discussions and critique - space for his own, independent artistic position. For all their provocation and irony, Lohse's oil paintings reveal a deep and passionate commitment to painting. The omnipresent artists signature (Herr Lohse, Schorsch) alludes to the idea of the artists role and its meaning for the value of the artwork. It dominates some of the works like a trademark. At the same time, it also shows how seriously the artist takes it and to what degree he sees himself as a painter among painters.
Jörg Lohse ǀ born in Lepzig in 1967 ǀ studied painting at Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst Leipzig; class of Ulrich Hachulla ǀ 1999 Master class of Ulrich Hachulla ǀ Lohses work is represented in various exhibitions; 2012 in the Jahresausstellung at the Kunstverein Achau ǀ 2005 - 2009 study visit in Italy ǀ the artist lives and works at Chiemsee.