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For the present anniversary
exhibition Jewels in the Rheingold, a
selection has been made according to the
principle of the exquisite, which
excludes the above works from the partnerships, but, as a
"best-of," gathers plenty of highlights.
The
side-lit hall of the Kunsthalle stands under the
rather historical portent of the classics,
the collection supplies prior to 2002―which have
been acquired from Rainer Speck as a group from the
Cologne collection, and have generously
remained in the Rhineland.
The Rheingold
predominantly collects artists which, as
students or teachers, show an affinity to
Düsseldorf's Art Academy and the Rhenish art
scene. This inventory is able to be
meaningfully and marvelously
complemented by additional purchases of
works by Georg Herold, Hubert Kiecol, Thomas
Schütte, and Rosemarie Trockel as well as by
many of the younger generation; also,
the arte povera of Kounellis and Mario
Merz.
Joseph Beuys, Marcel Broodthaers, and
James Lee Byars are important figures who all had
their first major solo exhibitions at
the Rheingold. Additionally, Carl Andre, who first
opened in 1967 at Konrad Fischer Galerie, Sigmar Polke,
and Walter Dahn's works from the wild Cologne
nineteen-eighties, along with Martin
Kippenberger, whose work had to wait for some
time to achieve museum recognition,
and last but not least, Albert Oehlen.
In the
cinema hall, after Martin Kippenberger's
and Sigmar Polke's overtures, large and great
works from the Rheingold Collection await: Manfred
Pernice with the huge sculpture
Bibette Headland from 1999, an
untitled abstraction of André Butzer,
Hansjoerg Dobliar's Return of the
Mothership, Jörg Immendorff's
figurine, Corinne Wasmuht's
Pathfinder as well as Neo Rauch's Seewind
(Sea breeze). They are flanked by creations
by diverse artists such as Peter Doig, Eberhard
Havekost, Joanne Greenbaum, and a joint work by
Albert Oehlen and Jonathan Meese.
Their
love of painting and their reflection or critical
distance is clear in all the work. Colorful
paintings are variegated in a
combination that evokes wild thoughts.
Further up on the upper level of the gallery hall,
very colorful creations of pure joy are
conveyed with the "film images" by Peter Doig that
were made for his movie theater in Trinidad.
Doig's film posters form a pillar to the top and are caught by
Imi Knoebel's works from the series "Pure Freude"
(Pure joy).
Photography
dominates the first floor. Beat Streuli's people
in cities as well as Peter Doig's images mediate
between the upper and lower exhibition
spaces. On the walls, works by Candida Höfer,
Thomas Ruff, and Thomas Struth present in many
facets the clear view of contemporary new
objectivity. More famous exponents
of today's photography continue as an
example of discussion: Lois Renner,
Wolfgang Tillmans, and Jeff Wall. In
correspondence or supplement to these works,
on the outside of the center block are works by Andy Hope
(1930), Gregor Schneider and Peter Piller, with
drawings by Rosemarie Trockel and Thomas
Schütte shown inside. Other sculptural pieces by
Trockel, Georg Herold, and Hubert Kiecol
divide the space and have an axial
relationship to the spaces downstairs. Over
eighty works by thirty-five artists of the
Rheingold Collection are an exquisite
selection, and are, in a certain but
definitely subjective way, the jewels in
the Rheingold.
Curator: Gregor Jansen
Exhibition and catalogue are
supported by the Rheingold Collection.
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