Florian Baudrexel at Kunstverein Hamburg
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June 22, 2012
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Kunstverein Hamburg |
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| Florian
Baudrexel, "Installation Infant," 2007, and "Skulptur Fomal," 2007. Installation view, Bielefelder Kunstverein 2007. VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2012. |
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Florian Baudrexel |
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Florian Baudrexel (b. 1968 in Munich, lives in Berlin)
has developed two rooms with very different spatial concepts for his solo
exhibition at the Kunstverein Hamburg. The first, austere and virtually
empty, has sloping walls that seem to recede and offers few points of
reference, either in terms of discernible visible phenomena or in terms of
clues that might serve as a guide in physically experiencing the space. The
other is characterized by profusion, an abundance that seems almost to
close in on itself, blurring the line between the space and the boundaries
delimiting it. To get from one room to another, visitors pass through a
space inspired by a human face, streaming in and out of its "mouth" like
breaths of air. The dialectic that arises—between inner room and
outer room, emptiness and fullness, coolness and apparent warmth—is
based on emphasizing form. With its ostensibly unremarkable forms, the
outer room appears to embody reserve and restraint, while the sculptural
structure of the inner room seems to thrust itself to the fore. However,
visitors should not be fooled by this moment of contrast, for of course
both spaces were deliberately designed to bring out their opposite.
One is struck immediately by the formal rigor, the abstraction, the
composition of the room installation. And yet the playfulness with which
Baudrexel developed his sculpture shines through despite—or perhaps
even because of—these aspects. Actually, the entire exhibition can be
regarded as one big sculpture. Baudrexel works from models and his
small-scale sculptures often resemble them. And of course, models are
frequently used in architecture and in interior design, disciplines that
are not content to restrict their focus to a painting on the wall or an
individual object, but take a broader view and think in terms of the big
picture. |
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