The objects have been revoked from their original classification systems and
“thrown” into a new context. Their arrangement within the image and the
suspension of gravity bespeak by no means an affective but rather a self-reflective
attitude. The fact that the objects in the paintings are rendered recognizable in a
sensual and detailed fashion, directs the paintings’ spotlights determinedly on
their own production processes: the act of seeing, of painting, of showing itself.
If today the world’s order systems are both being questioned and falling apart
then what will show me how things are held together? The objects’ mis-en-scène
in front of a seemingly decoupled background forms something not unlike a
museum display within the paintings. One gets the impression that the
unsentimental representation, the portrayed fragility and mysterious cohesion
create a display that simultaneously preserves and needs to be overcome, literally
“suspending”. The skin of the star fruit may be so smooth, the canvas stretched
so taught, in the end all things shallow have a depth and vice versa. Or were the
corners of the canvas ground down by life? It’s about saving in more than one
sense.
Incorruptible self-reflection and staged mysteriousness are put to test within the
pictorial space. Painting’s continuous oscillation between representation and
abstraction allows for something to be simultaneously retained and dismissed.
The apparent lightness of Katharina Schilling’s painting can be integrated within
this horror vacui of the semiotic universe. The fear of emptiness asks: Must I
dedicate myself to these appearances from a microscopic proximity, must I name
names to understand, or can I recognize more in rough gestures from afar? More
of what? https://artsorigin.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/pexels-photo-7364067-e1629961898227-1.jpeg
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