Markus Proschek : true lies /
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Author / Creator: | Proschek, Markus, 1981- artist, conceptor. |
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Imprint: | Köln : Snoeck Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, [2018] ©2018 |
Description: | 141 pages : color illustrations ; 28 cm |
Language: | English German |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11686684 |
Varying Form of Title: | True lies Title of exhibition: Markus Proschek : possession |
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Other authors / contributors: | Pernegger, Karin, editor. Kunstraum Innsbruck, host institution. |
ISBN: | 9783864422584 3864422582 |
Notes: | Published on the occasion of the exhibition held at Kunstraum Innsbruck, Austria, 21 April-8 July 2017. Includes a conversation with the artist. Title from spine. Includes bibliographical references. Text of conversation in English; text of essay in English and German. |
Summary: | Markus Proschek (*1981), born in Austria and now living in Berlin, seems to invariably perceive subliminal Nazi aesthetics and totalitarian architectures as artistic challenges. The bronze sculpture of the "Swimmer" (2006), painted in oil, is one such case. It refers in a certain way to the pictorial tradition of Psyche or Narcissus, but oscillates aesthetically as a Breker-esque beauty between Nazi bombast and Bauhaus coolness. Proschek's highly subtle works aim to trace this ambivalent balance between ideological appropriation and works of art that are open to interpretive manipulation. His oil painting "The Fallen Merz" (2007), its ironic-fictitious scenery set at Haus der Kunst in Munich, features in the foreground a sculpture based on Caspar David Friedrich's famous painting "The Sea of Ice", with elements of Kurt Schwitters's "Merzbau" piling up in the adjoining room. The canonic repertory is thus parodistically confronted with the possibility of its disavowal when it is presented with an element of insubordination--such as with the Nazi aesthetics of the exhibition hall. Jacques Derrida already emphasized that culture and art do not constitute a stable currency in the sense that meaning derives only from the relationship between things, which at the same time makes obsolete the idea that there actually is something like an original, true meaning. Markus Proschek comments: "I thought, the views on the subject were a little unsatisfactory. Most of the contemporary works of art that examined these subjects always seemed to me either very moralistic, superficial or, even worse, boring." |
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