IN FEAR AND TREPIDATION
H.H. Cut with the Kirchen Knife |
Dada? Even today when I hear the word I hear a baby pronouncing his first word. Perhaps the movement was a little more sophisticated than that! Dada artists of the early 20th century were constantly deconstructing the imagery around them, using scissors and glue to craft new objects from mundane, everyday items. Photomontage, collage and assemblage reigned supreme, as artists like Marcel Duchamp, Kurt Schwitters and Jean Arp built their own brand of anti-establishment art making. The emphasis was always on the anti, be it anti-war, anti-bourgeois, or even anti-art.
H.H.(1889-1978) was the only woman artist in the group. It was also difficult for her to be accepted. Even her companion of the time, Raoul Hausmann, thought she should stay and home and doing something else. Considering her character, I doubt if that went down very well.
Self portrait in the 20's |
Until seeing the exhibition I was convinced she was Schwitter's companion. Her bisexuality left me a little confused. Höch left her seven-year relationship with Raoul Hausmann in 1922. In 1926, she began a relationship with the Dutch writer and linguist Mathilda Brugman, whom Höch met through mutual friends Kurt and Helma Schwitters. By autumn of 1926, Höch moved to Hague to live with Brugman, where they lived until 1929, at which time they moved to Berlin. They did not explicitly define their relationship as lesbian but private love. In 1935, Höch began a relationship with Kurt Matthies, whom she was married to from 1938-1944. It’s certainly a little confusing and because of her sexual duality I was even more surprised that my Mother knew nothing about her.
Apart from her work, she was not, in my book, a very attractive woman when young but in her latter years, she was a beauty. Unfortunately I did not find a suitable photo on Internet to demonstrate this.
1939 |
Strange and beautiful 1966 |
Little Sun 1969 |
Around a red mouth 1967 |
Flight 1931 |
Heads of State |
Untitled 1930 |
Made for a party 1936 |
Grotte and I do like this..... |
There are an overwhelming number of sites which describe her work on Internet. Looking at it like that makes the different periods even more difficult to follow. But her first works I did like. Perhaps not the last.
Pierrette opted to go to the Saatchi Gallery after lunch keeping the following day free. Just as well as the underground was to be on strike and the weather forecast sounded dreary.
This is a centre which I have been wanting to visit for a long time. The Pinault collection is probably the French equivalent. You may remember that Jerome, Laurent and I have visited the Palazzo Grazzi and the Ponta della Dogana in Venice twice. Something always comes out of these visits even if over all we are not too keen on his collections. The « Body Language » exhibition at the Saatchi Gallery was of interest to me after all those years of studying semiotics.
I go along to such exhibitions with some trepidation.
There are times you find room after room of dull, meaningless pieces veering between the pretentious and the banal, that try as you might you can find no connection with.
That, I guess, is the risk of trying to find something that takes contemporary art in a fresh direction.
Saatchi's principal raison d'être, is to discover new talent, nurture it and bring it to a squeamish public in a palatable way. From my point of view, Pinault has the same outlook.
They might be making oodles of cash for themselves in the process, but then the relationship between artist and facilitator has always been first and foremost a business.
"Body Language" quite simply takes representations of the human form as its binding theme. It includes a fair bit of figurative painting, some dramatic photographic essays and the type of humorous sculpture and installation works that both Saatchi and Pinault always go out of their way to achieve. I don’t have to add that there was not one artist known to me…here is quite a selection of works we saw. I could see that Pierrette was not impressed - but let’s face it, neither was I. Finally though, when going through all the photos here, a lot of the work I did like. Strange isn't it? Sometimes the photos seem to be more interesting than the real thing.
Henry Taylor -2008 |
Makiko Kudo 2010 - Burning red |
Makiko Kudo 2010 - Floating island |
Makiko Kudo 2010 - Invisible |
Makiko Kudo 2010 - I see season |
The Feast by Eddie Martinez. |
Justin Matherly - All excellent things are as difficult as they are rare 2011 |
Dana Schutz 2008 - Reformers |
Chantal Joffe 2004 |
Chantal Joffe 2004 |
Chantal Joffe 2004 |
Chantal Joffe 2004 |
Chantal Joffe Walking woman 2004 |
Chantal Joffe 2004 |
Kasper Kovitz -2010 - Iberico Ham |
Michael Cline - That's That - 2008 |
The cat, lower right in the Beer Garden |
Nicole Eisenmen - Beer garden at night 2007 |
Chantal Joffe -Woman,with Flowers 2004 |
Chantal Joffe 2004 |
|
Alexander Tinei - Music Teacher 2009 |
Jansson Stegner 2006 |
Jansson Stegner 2006 |
Nicole Eisenman Beasley Street 2007 |
All the artists |
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