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Colour and light as sensory stimulus and the phenomenon of light
encountering surfaces are core elements of the work of artists
Silvia Gertsch, born in Switzerland in 1963, and the German Xerxes
Ach, born in 1957. Gertsch works on reverse-glass, using snapshots
of young people in summer, sunbathing, strolling down the street,
or children absorbed in play. Ach has turned to micro-phenomena in
which light encounters various materials, is refracted in various
ways, and generates abstract visual compositions. In spite of their
different stylistic languages - realism on the one side, abstract
colour field painting on the other - occupying antagonistic
positions in contemporary painting, the two artists take a similar
approach, starting from photos they take themselves and digitally
edit, as well as found ones recording fleeting visual stimuli.
Coinciding with a dual exhibition of Silvia Gertsch and Xerxes Ach
at the Museum of Fine Arts Bern, this new book features their work
from two decades. Richly illustrated, it puts their differing
pictorial languages in a dance-like dialogue, revealing each
artist's relation to current artistic discourses.
Korea is still a divided country that apparently never found its
way out of the Cold War. The differences between the socialist
North, which follows a dynastic leadership cult, and the capitalist
South, with its developed democracy, could hardly be greater.
Encompassing all areas of life, this divergence is also reflected
in the art of the two countries: through the vibrant contemporary
art scene in South Korea and the socialist-realist tradition of
painting in North Korea, two diametrically opposed artistic
attitudes exist in parallel, reflecting the incompatibility of the
political systems and the stark differences in the way of life of
the populations. To mark the exhibition of both North and South
Korean works from the Sigg Collection at the Kunstmuseum Bern, a
comprehensive, richly illustrated catalogue is being published,
which sheds light upon the theme of the border in contemporary
Korean art from both sides.
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Gurlitt Status Report (Hardcover)
Kunstmuseum Bern, Kunst- Und Ausstellungshalle Der Bundesrepublik Deutschland Gmbh
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R928
R731
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When over 1,000 artworks by outstanding artists of the modern era
appeared on the scene in 2012, the find was celebrated as a
sensation, though the suspicion that it might be art looted by the
Nazis also reared its head. This extensive, lavishly illustrated
publication documents for the first time a selection of works from
the estate of the art dealer Hildebrand Gurlitt and examines the
turbulent story of the 'Gurlitt art trove'. In addition to the
presentation of the pictures, the estate of Cornelius Gurlitt (1932
- 2014), the son of the art dealer Hildebrand Gurlitt, is set in
its historica l context by a prestigious list of authors, thereby
ensuring transparency and enlightenment. One important topic is the
provenance of the works, which in some cases were vilified by the
National Socialist regime as "degenerate art". Which works in this
col lection are looted art? Which ones were purchased legally, and
which ones were acquired in forced sales? Another area of focus
will be the biographies of Jewish collectors and artists who were
the victims of art theft and the Holocaust. A further topic of
investigation is how stolen works were returned to the museums and
private collections after 1945. The official catalogue of the
Kunstmuseum Bern and the Kunst - und Ausstellungshalle der
Bundesrepublik Deutschland (Bundeskunsthalle) in Bonn permits for
the first time a nuanced understanding of this case which is unique
in the postwar history of Germany.
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