From BERLIN to LA: GOODBYE TOMORROW
KATRIN KAMPMANN, BERLIN’S NEW YOUNG WILD
GARBOUSHIAN GALLERY
March 19 - April 30, 2011
Opening Reception: March 19, 6 - 8pm
(February 2011—Beverly Hills, CA) When Berlin-based artist Katrin Kampmann asks, “How do we recognize pictures? How has our behavior with them changed?” one gets the sense that she is in fact framing a visual treatise on the topic. The results of this exploratory process are apparent in Goodbye Tomorrow, Katrin Kampmann’s first solo exhibition of paintings in the United States, opening March 19, 2011, at GARBOUSHIAN GALLERY in Beverly Hills.

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Kampmann's painting Goodbye Tomorrow (from which the entire exhibition derives its name) takes German film director Alexander Kluge’s 1966 film Yesterday Girl as its starting point. A non-linear chronicle of the main character Anita’s restless movements from place to place, the film jumps jarringly between time and place. In a similarly kaleidoscopic fashion, Kampmann's painting skips between the present, past, place and subject. A man and woman, who by their vague orange silhouette appear to hearken from the mid 20th century, loom ominously as a second couple looks into the screen of a modern day laptop computer. Meanwhile a partially obscured women—Anita perhaps?—turns away from the viewer as her apparent doppelganger—who bears a striking resemblance to Kampmann herself—dances freely in a purple dress. Abstracted elements take equally center stage throughout; paint is thrown, etched, and hastily brushed to bewildering effect, allowing the meaning-making process to deteriorate, much as one’s own memory of an event or the celluloid medium of film itself might degrade over time.

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Essayist Jürgen Schilling explains with regards to Kampmann’s 2007 Nacht der Entscheidung exhibition for Shultz Contemporary in Berlin: “The eye is wandering, because it encounters manifold formal and coloristic sensations and it is being both led and seduced. The viewer will note with amazement, how, in this sophisticated game of colors, ever new stimuli, ever new sections become meaningful or how certain, at first neglected parts come into the foreground. Scantily sketched, dissolving abstract and narratively figurative stages combine to a texture.”
The return to painting, and the possibilities held therein, is a central tenet of the neue junge wilde scene mushrooming in a naturally spontaneous response to the multimedia art trend that has dominated German art and art schools over the past two decades. Drawing its name from Germany’s Junge Wilde (“young wild”) movement—a neo-expressionist painting style that centered in Berlin, Hamburg and Cologne in the 1980s—the neue junge wilde shares with its predecessor an emphasis on subjectivity and private coded language, as well as gesture and strong coloring. As a former master student of Karl Horst Hödicke (often considered the “Father of the Junge Wilde”), Kampmann is a natural de facto spearhead of the painterly revolution currently taking place in Berlin.
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
WHAT
Goodbye Tomorrow – New Young Wild Paintings by Berlin-Based Katrin Kampmann
WHEN
Opening Reception: March 19, 2011, 6 - 8 pm
Exhibition: March 19 - April 30, 2011
Gallery Hours: Monday - Friday, 10 am - 5 pm, or by appointment
WHERE
GARBOUSHIAN GALLERY
GARBOUSHIAN GALLERY
427 North Camden Drive
Beverly Hills, CA 90210
(310) 274-5205
PRESS CONTACT
Brent Turner
the Campbells [ideas + communications for contemporary culture]
(323) 300-6132
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