Germany, mon Amour!

Contemporary in Germany. Art. Architecture. Design.

Catalogue of the Imago Mundi Collection: Germany, mon Amour! (2015) by Contemporary in Germany. Art. Architecture. Design.Imago Mundi

An extraordinary collection where some of the most significant personalities in the contemporary scene sit alongside a representative cross section of a young and very young generation of art creators. A visionary selection of over 200 which together show a bold and compelling prolificacy, capable of taking German art away from the beaten track As the curator Peter Noever writes in his introduction, "the artists, architects and designers who are brought together make it clear to see: art, like love here clearly show us that art, like love, does not remain a merely archival matter, but much rather provides a fertile soil for the present and the future.”

FLATZ (Wolfgang Flatz) - Passgenau, FLATZ (Wolfgang Flatz), 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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FLATZ (Wolfgang Flatz) - Passgenau (2015)

«In Germany today, the historic dilemma Thomas Mann presented to the students at the University of Hamburg in 1953 resonates louder than ever: will it be possible to abandon the idea of a ‘German Europe’ to develop instead a ‘European Germany’, more open to the needs of other peoples? German art tries to provide an answer by disrupting the present, creating cracks in the maps of what we already know. Because if history and politics have the moral task of providing mankind with security, art takes a different path. And artistic invention of the future is primarily about creating new structures, designing utopias, exploring the imagination». Luciano Benetton

Wolfgang Ganter - Little Model for Self Organisation, Wolfgang Ganter, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Wolfgang Ganter - Little Model for Self Organisation (2015)

The curator of the collection is Peter Noever, designer and curator of art, architecture and media, and former artistic director of MAK, Austrian Museum of Applied Arts and Contemporary Art in Vienna: «Germany, mon Amour! – a difficult undertaking at first glance, and at the same time, of course, a life story and a love story of sorts».

Georges Adéagbo - L’art et l’art..!, Georges Adéagbo, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Georges Adéagbo - L’art et l’art..! (2015)



«This project lays bare the dynamics of our relationship with art in an unusually clear manner. It is what it is and always was. Working with art remains an idiosyncratic and precarious challenge,» comments Noever.

Martin Wöhrl - Cloud/reverse, Martin Wöhrl, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Martin Wöhrl - Cloud/reverse (2015)


Following is a selection of artworks from the collection; in some cases the artists have chosen to accompany their work for Imago Mundi with notes, comments or quotes.

Hugo Holger Busse - Ohne Titel (oser faire qc., français = deutsch: wagen etwas zu tun, italiano: osare fare qualcosa, english: -----), Hugo Holger Busse, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Hugo Holger Busse - Ohne Titel (oser faire qc., français = deutsch: wagen etwas zu tun, italiano: osare fare qualcosa, english: -----) (2015)

“In the end Barkow Leibinger are bricoleurs as much as they are engineers. [...] There is always an element of inspired performance in bricolage. And as the greatest philosophers in German aesthetics tell us, such play (Spiel) is also essential to art; it opens up a realm for an imaginative response to any question. In the end, this is what Barkow Leibinger offer us all: Spielraum, room for play, space for invention.” — Hal Foster

Barkow Leibinger Architekten (Frank Barkow & Regine Leibinger) - Loop Segment, Barkow Leibinger Architekten (Frank Barkow & Regine Leibinger), 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Barkow Leibinger Architekten (Frank Barkow & Regine Leibinger) - Loop Segment (2015)



“Reinhard Doubrawa explains the world” by dismembering it and turning a few selected portions of it into main characters. The techniques available for this concept are many and varied. Photography is a ubiquitous procedure, although we cannot escape the suspicion that Doubrawa is primarily interested in the cropped details, so perhaps it is a technique of release. The conceptual artist takes pictures but is not a photographer. It is not images that are wanted, but signs, which stand, if they stand for anything at all, for something absurd, in other words something ordinary. Who’s looking, after all? Cutting out from the whole is a means of visualization. Reinhard Ermen, excerpt from the catalogue text ‚ALLES“, 2011, Salon Verlag, Cologne

Reinhard Doubrawa - IDENTIFIED, Reinhard Doubrawa, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Reinhard Doubrawa - IDENTIFIED (2015)



Sarah-Christina Benthien born in 1978 in Lübeck, lives and works in Hamburg. Studied at the Hochschule für Bildende Künste in Hamburg and at the Kongelige Danske Kunstakademi in Copenhagen (Denmark).

Sarah-Christina Benthien - Sweet Atmosphere VIII, Sarah-Christina Benthien, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Sarah-Christina Benthien - Sweet Atmosphere VIII (2015)


Bisky’s works have been shown in many exhibitions in Germany and abroad, and they are part of the MoMA collection in New York (USA). Using powerful colors, he reformulates personal experiences of terror, past travels in Brazil and influences from the world of the media into scenes of beauty, sexuality, violence and destruction.

Norbert Bisky - Untitled, Norbert Bisky, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Norbert Bisky - Untitled (2015)



Matthias Böttger is the artistic director of DAZ (Deutsches Architektur Zentrum) in Berlin since 2011 and became a professor for Sustainable Architecture + Future Tactics (SAFT) at the Kunstuniversität Linz (Austria) in 2012. Since 2003 his Berlin based thinktank raumtaktik – office from a better future deals with spatial intelligence and interventions. In 2013 he was curator of the German contribution to the 10th Bienal de Arquitetura de São Paulo (Brazil). In 2008 he was co-curator of the German pavilion at the 11th Biennale di Venezia (Italy).

Matthias Böttger & Raumtaktik Berlin - germany.mon.amour.baukulturatlas.de, Matthias Böttger & Raumtaktik Berlin, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Matthias Böttger & Raumtaktik Berlin - germany.mon.amour.baukulturatlas.de (2015)



Dellbrügge & de Moll question the relationship between art and power and analyze the conditions in which art is created. Between 2001 and 2009 they worked in the space that used to be the Nazi state artist’s Staatsatelier for Arno Breker in Berlin (now named Kunsthaus Dahlem). This inspired them to go back to the national socialist roots of that place and analyze why the historical continuities and the building’s origins had been omitted or re-written for decades. In 2015, in the grounds of the Öffentlicher Raum Graz (Austria), Dellbrügge & de Moll presented an intervention called “Das Monumentale ist meine Krankheit” (The monumental is my malady).

Dellbrügge & de Moll (Christiane Dellbrügge & Ralf de Moll) - Das Monumentale ist meine Krankheit, Dellbrügge & de Moll (Christiane Dellbrügge & Ralf de Moll), 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Dellbrügge & de Moll (Christiane Dellbrügge & Ralf de Moll) - Das Monumentale ist meine Krankheit (2015)

Before founding his own firm with Karl Dudler and Pete Wellbergen in 1986, Max Dudler worked at the Oswald Mathias Ungers firm. Since 1992 he has lead his own office with branches in Berlin, Zurich (Switzerland) and Frankfurt. After several teaching assignments and visiting professorships in different cities, such as Venice and Mantua (Italy), Dortmund, Vienna (Austria), Cesena and Milan (Italy), in 2004 Max Dudler was appointed professor at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf.

Max Dudler - Stadtsilhouette, Max Dudler, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Max Dudler - Stadtsilhouette (2015)

Anke Eilergerhard is represented by works in museums and collections in Austria, Canada, Germany, Liechtenstein, The Netherlands, South Africa, Switzerland, UK and USA.

Anke Eilergerhard - Fragile!, Anke Eilergerhard, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Anke Eilergerhard - Fragile! (2015)

The idea, the thought, the draft are the bases for the execution of my artwork. Ideas come from everyday life situations, social and cultural atmospheres. Then the idea expresses itself in the performances and installation art. As well as this, I use the body as a means of expression. The artistic idea is expressed using the body alone, as part of the installation and within the context of an audience. The subjects I deal with are time, movement, space, material, body, action/interaction. I try to create works of art that leave free space for associations and new possibilities for the viewer. I take a special situation from everyday life and without illustrating this one for one, I place it into a new context. I aim to create art where all of the elements are connected together to form a whole work of art (Gesamtkunstwerk). — Nezaket Ekici

Nezaket Ekici - “1 Perle 1 Gebot” inspiriert von “99 Commandments” Performance Installation 2013, Nezaket Ekici, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Nezaket Ekici - “1 Perle 1 Gebot” inspiriert von “99 Commandments” Performance Installation 2013 (2015)


There is the attempt made by the tiny canvas to increase in size. The attempt has not been fully fulfilled due to the extension, which has not yet completely found its place. There is also the uncompleted movement of the extension towards a possible definite location. This movement has been sealed by paint in ordinary natural color. — Ayşe Erkmen

Ayşe Erkmen - extension in natural, Ayşe Erkmen, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Ayşe Erkmen - extension in natural (2015)



The work ironically refers to the motif of the Open Hand (La Main Ouverte) in the work of Le Corbusier. It is a recurring motif in the architect’s oeuvre as a symbol for the exchange of ideas. Against the backdrop of the work’s title “Masters of the Universe” the motif also alludes to Michelangelo’s iconic hand of God in the Sistine Chapel that completes his creation. The open hand of the deus geometra here turns into a symbol for the megalomaniacal gesture of the all determining architect and city planner. — Lukas Feireiss

Lukas Feireiss - Masters of the Universe, Lukas Feireiss, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Lukas Feireiss - Masters of the Universe (2015)



[...] The forms he uses are always based on given formats, standard systems, which constitute the norms of everyday life in the societies of the first and second worlds...
Friedemann Malsch, Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein
Art is eerie to me — Thom Barth

Thom Barth - Batteried (northern south pole), Thom Barth, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Thom Barth - Batteried (northern south pole) (2015)



Ingo Günther grew up in Germany. He studied at the Universität Frankfurt and at the Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf. His early sculptural media works and journalistic projects were pursued in TV, print, and the art field. He played a pioneering and crucial role in the evaluation and interpretation of satellite data for internationally print media and TV news. Worked as an artist, correspondent and author for German and Japanese news media. In 1989 he started the “Worldprocessor Project” and founded the first independent TV station in Eastern Europe (Channel X, Leipzig). Researches in Cambodian, Burmese and Laotian refugee camps inspired the “Refugee Republic Project” (since 1990). Currently he is adviser to New York Hall of Science, New York (USA); the Museum of Emerging Sciences and Innovation, Tokyo (Japan); adviser and artistic director of Tochoji, Tokyo’s oldest Zen Temple (Japan). Ingo Günther is a frequent contributor to “Foresight” magazine, Tokyo. He runs an office in New York.

Ingo Günther - Refugee Republic Passport Cover Ingo Günther 1995/2007, Ingo Günther, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Ingo Günther - Refugee Republic Passport Cover Ingo Günther 1995/2007 (2015)

Peter Haimerl, whose architecture office was established in Munich in 1991, questions the boundaries of architecture and urban design. He concentrates on projects, which cross the lines of conventional architecture, proposing fascinating and unconventional solutions to create innovation. To live up to this goal, he works together with experts of many different fields. In order to achieve coherent concepts, he melds his architectural view with other contexts such as computer programming, sociology, economics, politics and conceptual art.

Peter Haimerl - ARCHITECTE, ANIMOS EXCITA! Peter, Peter Haimerl, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Peter Haimerl - ARCHITECTE, ANIMOS EXCITA! Peter (2015)



What does it mean to plan? According to Aristotle, the essence of the discipline lies in foreseeing and predetermining a future end state, a telos. The primacy of telos is based on a procedure that predetermines and subordinates the various elements of a building. The architect’s basic instrument is the plan. Essential is the double sense of it, as an accurate description of the layout of a building and as a means of controlling the future. This is what is inherent to all architectural operations. A plan designs an object, unifies diverse, often contradicting, factors into one language and establishes control towards the future. A project becomes a projection thrown into the future. Though, as a pretension of stable conditions, architecture seems more and more like a built anachronism, like an inert object with serious problems of adapting to an increasingly unpredictable future. The question that we posed to ourselves on the occasion of our new project at The Land is: How to build in an epoch without a telos? How to develop a structure that can react to the unforeseen? How to plan a loss of control? — Nikolaus Hirsch

Nikolaus Hirsch - Can Columns Walk, Nikolaus Hirsch, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Nikolaus Hirsch - Can Columns Walk (2015)


Is it better golden? — Elena Kaludova

Elena Kaludova - Western Exhalator, Elena Kaludova, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Elena Kaludova - Western Exhalator (2015)

In her series of collages Renata Kaminska gives her own take on topics such as the tense relationship of art and market/public as well as the constitution of art value and the meaning it acquires in and through contemporary societies. Kaminska is especially interested in newspapers – a basic, traditional, short-living yet still influential source of information available to a broad public – and she especially focuses on the representation of art in this medium. The collages could be seen as a phantasy about art that is emptied of any other value than the economic one, becoming a pure commodity, a sole domain of speculation of investors – pushing the limits of this devaluation even further. — Julia Wielgus

Renata Kaminska - “21. Juni 2015” serie Newspapers Objekts, Renata Kaminska, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Renata Kaminska - “21. Juni 2015” serie Newspapers Objekts (2015)

Jürgen Klauke is not a simple photographer: he is an artist who decided to use photography as a personal tool to investigate himself and the world around him. Back in the days, when body art was still an unknown issue, Klauke started considering the human physique as a form of expression, an amplifier for communicative purposes.

Jürgen Klauke - Desaströses Ich Jürgen, Jürgen Klauke, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Jürgen Klauke - Desaströses Ich Jürgen (2015)



Christin Lahr born in 1965 in Munich, lives and works as an artist and curator in Berlin and Leipzig. She has received several scholarships and awards, and has exhibited her work in Germany and abroad. Since 2001 she has been professor for Media Art at the Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst in Leipzig.

Christin Lahr - UNITED HUES OF HUMAN RIGHTS, Christin Lahr, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Christin Lahr - UNITED HUES OF HUMAN RIGHTS (2015)


Ecke Bonk is a conceptual artist, researcher and founder of the typosophic society (since 2001 typosophes sans frontières), he has participated twice in the documenta in Kassel and
several times in various Biennales, such as in Venice (Italy) and in Guangzhou (China). He deals with sign systems in art and culture. Fascinated by chance, non-causality and determinism, Bonk investigates conditions and connections in cultural productions.

Ecke Bonk - Ohne Titel (logistik ist die alchemie unserer zeit), Ecke Bonk, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Ecke Bonk - Ohne Titel (logistik ist die alchemie unserer zeit) (2015)


Marko Lehanka born in 1961 in Herborn. Studied at the Staatliche Hochschule für Bildende Künste Städelschule, Frankfurt. Since 2006 he is professor of Visual Arts and Sculpture at the Akademie der Bildenden Künste in Nuremberg.

Marko Lehanka - Ich mache hier nur mit, wegen Venedig!, Marko Lehanka, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Marko Lehanka - Ich mache hier nur mit, wegen Venedig! (2015)

Urs Lüthi - Art is the better life, Urs Lüthi, 2015, From the collection of: Imago Mundi
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Urs Lüthi - Art is the better life (2015)



http://imagomundiart.com/collections/germany-mon-amour

Credits: Story

Art Direction, Photography and Production
Fabrica

Curator
Peter Noever

Project Management / Member of Curatorial Team
Bettina M. Busse, Berlin

Communication / Member of Curatorial Team
Leonore Leonardy, Berlin

Advisory Board
Tina Bauermeister
Bettina M. Busse
Hans-Jürgen Commerell
Helmut Friedel
Uta Grosenick
Hubert Klumpner
Leonore Leonardy
Anca Munteanu Rimnic
Elisabeth Schweeger
Manfred Wakolbinger

Organization
Valentina Granzotto
Michela Liverotti

Editorial coordination
Enrico Bossan

Texts
Luciano Benetton
Bazon Brock
Peter Noever

Cover
Olaf Nicolai, SKINNER

Translation and editing
Emma Cole
NN / Christopher Roth
Giuseppe Messina (Service Scibbolet)
Pietro Valdatta
Martina Fornasaro

Art direction
Namyoung An

Photography
Marco Zanin

Production
Marco Pavan

Logistics

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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