Charline von Heyl, Secession 2004, Photo: Pez Hejduk
If there were a general theory of gestures,
a semiological discipline that would allow us to decipher gestures, then art criticism
would not be, as it is today, a matter of empiricism or "intuition"
or causally explaining away aesthetic phenomena, but would instead be an exact
analysis of gestures frozen into paintings. Lacking this kind of "choreographology",
perhaps it is a better strategy to observe the gesture itself, as though it took
place concretely before us and thus in us: as an example of freedom.
Vilem Flusser
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Charline von Heyl, Secession 2004, Photo: Pez Hejduk
The point of departure for Charline von Heyl's image production is the painterly
process of creation and the question of the means of painting. What is characteristic
for her image language developed from gestures and movements is that the actions
- unlike European and American Abstract Expressionism - are formulated neither
as signs nor writing, nor is the brush stroke itself elevated to a motif. It is
not the materiality of the tool nor its use as an extension of the body, but rather
the movement behind this, the movement of deciding, which is the actual theme
of her pictures. The multifaceted, often contradictory steps to determining and
developing the image are present in each work.
Palomino, 2003, Collection Suzanne and Jacob Doft, New York,
Courtesy Friedrich Petzel Gallery, New York
For her exhibition at the Secession, Charline von Heyl combines paintings and
drawings from the past year. The drawings - black and white collages, in which
fragments of found drawings and photos are chosen, copied, glued together and
combined with ink drawings into rhythmized structures - speak a more rapid and
direct language; in their vitality and drama, though, they conjoin great spontaneity
with a calculated development, just like the paintings.
Charline von Heyl, Secession 2004, Photo: Matthias Herrmann
Charline von Heyl's pictures derive their tension from the interplay of positive
and negative space, the alternation of light and dark and the countless layers
that are built up from foundation and object in contrast. In comprehending the
picture space as a space of action, the viewer frequently stumbles into unexpected,
challenging ambivalences: moments that foster and retard movement are played out
against one another and often are intensified to the point of the paradoxical;
a dark, dirty color scheme turns into one that is glaring or delicate, planes
of color leaping back and forth whirl through the space, dynamizing the picture's
depths and coming abruptly to a halt. These kinds of points of reversal bear witness
to an attitude that surrenders painting to the decisions and events of action,
that is always ready to employ contradictions and abandon what has been achieved,
in order to start again.
Charline von Heyl, Secession 2004, Photo: Matthias Herrmann
Sometimes the form of the presentation of the works is also determined by this
dialectic. The color drawings in the Grafisches Kabinet, for example, are hung
like posters, so that the fine materiality of the oil paint and the audacity of
the installation enter into a fascinating dialogue.
I Am Monkeys, 2003, Courtesy Friedrich Petzel Gallery, New
York
In seeking to avoid every form of conceptual representation, Charline von Heyl
develops a complexity that conjoins doubt and euphoria, states of intoxication
and sober insight. The pictures exude a mystery that can never be entirely resolved,
despite the most intensive endeavors of perception.
Charline von Heyl, Secession 2004, Photo: Matthias Herrmann
EXHIBITION DISCUSSION
Wednesday, June 30, 2004, 6 p.m. at the Secession, Gallery
with Charline von Heyl and Isabelle Graw
An event of
Friends of the Secession.
Untitled (CvH 03/033), 2003, The Judith Rothschild Foundation
Contemporary Drawings Collection, New York
PUBLICATION
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CHARLINE VON HEYL
52 pages, 21 colored illustrations, 16 b/w illustrations
author: John Kelsey
Secession 2004, ISBN 3-901926-70-4
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available in the shop |
CHARLINE VON HEYL, born 1960, lives and works in New York.
Exhibitions (selection): 2004 Galerie Bärbel Grässlin, Frankfurt; 2003
Friedrich Petzel Gallery, New York; 2002 Galerie Gisela Capitain, Cologne; 2001
Musterkarte, Modelos de Pintura en Alemania, Goethe-Institut International, Madrid;
1999 Das XX. Jahrhundert, INIT Kunsthalle Berlin; 1997 Künstlerhaus Bethanien,
Berlin
Untitled (CvH 03/037), 2003, The Judith Rothschild Foundation
Contemporary Drawings Collection, New York
The exhibition is supported by:
IFA.
Institut für Auslandsbeziehungen e.V.
For
further information and photographic material please contact:
Tamara Schwarzmayr
Secession, Association of Visual Artists Vienna Secession
Friedrichstraße 12, 1010 Vienna
Tel: +43-1-5875307-21, Fax: +43-1-5875307-34
presse@secession.at