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Norbert Bisky's artistic cosmos is as colorful as it is gruesome.
Many of his figurative paintings are suffused with densely packed
body parts-heads, torsos, arms-caught in flood waves and wedged
into one another. Orange skin tones, light pink, green, yellow, and
violet against radiant blue or somber black-brown dominate the
palette, an intense chromaticity that often contrasts with the
themes of the paintings: nude male bodies are torn apart, handsome
faces mangled. Bisky's powerful painting engenders ambivalent
feelings in which he explores the boundaries of representation. The
publication provides a first, long-overdue art-historical
examination of Bisky's oeuvre. Hubertus Gassner, Kathleen Buhler,
Dorothee Brill, and other authors pursue the questions prompted by
this vehement style of painting: Why this brutal treatment of the
body and its image? Why the decomposition of figuration and fixed
structures? Where is Bisky to be positioned? Exhibition: Kunsthalle
Rostock 16.11.2014-15.2.2015
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