|
Thorsten Brinkmann - Palais D'Edelwall |
||
|
“I know what you are thinking about,” said Tweedledum, “but it isn’t so, nohow.” Brinkmann’s influences, however, apparently extend beyond the reach of Logical Positivism. He is firmly locked within a classically German tradition of artmaking reaching from Joseph Beuys to Thomas Schütte, from the earnest struggles of Gregor Schneider and the aesthetics of Isa Genzken to the carnivalesque satires of Martin Kippenberger or Tino Sehgal. If we consider the self-consciously timeless nobility of the pose Beuys adopts in his Conversations with a dead hare, and cross it with the camp ‘nonsense’ of Sehgal’s Venice Biennalle performance with hired actors capering around the German pavilion chanting the line “This is so contemporary”, we start to get close to Brinkmann’s purpose and aesthetic. However, with Brinkmann the chant might be “This is so anachronistic.” Even Brinkmann’s approach to lens-work has distant echos of the ‘Düsseldorf School’, with its detached, front-on, mid-height view. Nonetheless, in terms of the lens as reliable veritas, the School’s über-daddy, Bernd Becker, might be deeply troubled. There remains an argument that Brinkmann does accord to Becker’s principles, in that his photographs are a straightforward documentation of ‘actual’ performance. The prints, unlike Andreas Gursky’s, are not digitally manipulated in any way; rather they strictly accord to that which Brinkmann has sculpturally constructed before the lens. This ‘veritas’ is merely tested by his temporary fabrications owing more to the world of Roman Signer than the black-and-white ‘reality’ of Bernd and Hilder Becker. This is Thorsten Brinkmann’s first solo exhibition in Ireland. Previous exhibitions include the Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, the Berlinische Galerie and the Museum for Contemporary Art, Berlin. He was awarded the City of Hamburg Fellowship in 2006. mother’s tankstation generously acknowledges the support of the Goethe-Institut Dublin
|
|
|
|
© 2007 mother's tankstation |
||