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Wiebke Siem (1954 Kiel, DE – Berlin, DE) became known in the
1990s for extensive installations in which she alienated everyday
objects, such as pieces of clothing, shoes, bags, or toys, or
transformed them into oversized objects. Wiebke Siems uses pieces
of furniture, objects, and materials with domestic connotations and
whimsical, often puppet-like figures to create psychologically
charged installations that are as oppressive as they are humorous
and that raise questions about societal role models. Siem’s art
repeatedly employs a formal language and a mode of presentation
that refer to ethnological objects and collections. This enables
her to comment on Modernism’s problematic appropriation
strategies toward non-European art. In addition to borrowing motifs
from art and cultural history, Siem critically engages the
mechanisms of the male-dominated art business – a central theme
in her oeuvre.
In less than two decades, Jacoba van Heemskerck (1876-1923) created
a powerful oeuvre comprising paintings, woodcuts, glass works and
mosaics. Her expressive subjects, including landscapes, townscapes
and harbour scenes, are characterised by luminosity and increasing
transparency, by rhythmical compositions of the pictorial space,
black contours and an intensive use of colour. After her artistic
beginnings in the circle around Mondrian and elsewhere, Jacoba van
Heemskerck belonged to the centre of the avant-garde movement
emanating from the "Sturm" of Herwarth Walden in Berlin - the
gallerist and publisher who made artists like Marc, Kandinsky and
Jawlensky famous. Her work is shaped by her orientation towards
Anthroposophy, which bears witness to her interest in the elemental
effect of light and colour on the viewer. Her creative work is
highly topical today thanks to her understanding of nature and the
cosmos as a world viewed as a whole.
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