Home Artists Venues Exhibitions Texts Books Editions Maps Services Register Contact  
Amsterdam Basel Berlin Brussels Cologne London LA Madrid Milan New York Paris Vienna Zurich More  

Torben Giehler

 
catalogue | image | text | vita | contact  update
 
Mont Blanc, 2002, acrylic on canvas, 364 x 210 cm

More images: www.artnews.org/torbengiehler

01 | 02 | 03 | 04 | 05 | 06 | 07 | 08 | 09 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13
   
Torben Giehler: "Sputnik Sweetheart"

In his second solo exhibition at Arndt & Partner Torben Giehler presents five large-scale acrylic paintings that explore new pictorial solutions in combining traditional painting with digital encoding, methods of representation with techniques of construction.
He begins his luminous interlaced, geometric paintings with freehand drawings of urban areas and cityscapes, which he downloads onto the computer and digitally redesigns into complex pictorial arrangements. He then transposes these newly generated compositions - sometimes resembling sectional views of 4-dimensional hypercubes - onto the canvas. This method allows Giehler to create vibrating rhythmical grids of colour that are made of vigorously jagged lines and superimposed angular shapes. Thus he refuses any categorisation of his work into figuration, abstraction, or Concrete Art.

One of the central paintings in the exhibition is titled after the novel “sputnik sweetheart” by Haruki Murakami, published last year. In this novel Murakami plays with reality and dream – two worlds, which he considers existing parallel to one another. His characters are lonely travellers between theses worlds and circle around one another like satellites without ever managing to get close to one another. “Sputnik”, meaning “companion” in Russian, is the nickname that one of Murakami’s female protagonists gives to the woman she longingly loves, but who is unable to love her back. Whereas Murakami places emphasis on the distance between his characters, Giehler sends the viewer into dizzying heights above his abstract architectonic landscapes, creating an impression of looking at manipulated satellite photos of dense urban areas or at the computer screen of a flight simulator. Giehler’s abstract colourful arrangements of interwoven geometric shapes and lines evoke anonymous architectural environments without any indication of human life or any reference to specific places. At the same time, his screened structures are reminiscent of pixels. Giehler’s dynamic compositions seem like crystallizations of visible transportation networks and urban structures, as well as of virtual communication networks, information highways, and multi-media systems. In contrast to Murakami, who transposes the parallel worlds of his protagonists into mythical and spiritual spheres, Giehler travels through the ubiquitous digital worlds that increasingly shape the face of our environment.

Even though the viewer is drawn into a coherent space, Giehlers paintings display variations and interpretations rather than representations of digital 3-D or 4-D spaces. Due to the precise and multi-layered application of paint, he achieves a collage-like effect that counteracts any perspective illusion. His vibrating synthetic colours follow pictorial demands rather than refer to an exterior reality. In this sense Giehler’s grid arrangements may also be read in the context of Concrete Art in the first half of the 20th century, for example works by Piet Mondrian or Theo van Doesburg. While Mondrian unfolds the universal spiritual structures, Giehler extracts the laws of our digitalised and digitally generated realities and employs them like modules for his own pictorial language. His sometimes ironically exaggerated worlds are both: science-fiction and today’s sped-up reality.

Torben Giehler was born in 1973 in Bad Oeynhausen, Germany, graduated from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts of Boston, USA, and now lives and works in New York City.

Having exhibited in numerous American and European galleries, his work was lately included in the exhibition “Painting Pictures” at the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg. Moreover Giehler recently had an extensive solo show at the Museum of Contemporary Art of Salamanca, Spain. We are delighted to announce Torben Giehler’s second solo exhibition at Arndt & Partner.
   

Torben Giehler

1973 born in Bad Oeynhausen, Germany

Lives and works in New York, United States

Education

1997 Diploma, School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Scholarship, New York Studio Program, New York
1999 Fifth Year Certificate, School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Solo Exhibitions

2005
Arndt & Partner, Zurich, Switzerland

2004
Leo Koenig Inc., New York
"Sputnik Sweetheart", Arndt & Partner, Berlin

2003
Centro de Arte de Salamanca, Spanien
“Torben Giehler”, The Happy Lion (Leo Koenig, Inc & Galerie Michael Janssen), Los Angeles, CA
Paolo Curti & Co. mailand, Italy
Eleni Koroneou, Athen, Greece

2002
Arndt & Partner, Berlin
Leo Koenig Inc., New York
Galerie Frank, Paris

2001
Art Dealers Invitational, Marseille

2000
Leo Koenig Inc., New York

1999
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Group Exhibitions

2006
Wilhelm Hack Museum, Ludwigshafen

2005
Prague Biennale 2, Prague, Czech Republic
“Greater New York”, PS1 New York

2004
"Surface Tension", Chelsea Art Museum, New York, USA
"Old School", Armory Art Center, West Palm Beach, Florida, USA
"Treasure Islands", Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg, Germany

2003
"Project 244: MetaScape", Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio*
"MetaScape", Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, USA
"The Melvins Show", curated by Bob Nickas, Anton Kern Gallery, NYC
"Painting Pictures", Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg
Texas Gallery, Houston, Texas
The Dubrow International, Kravets Wehby Gallery and The Roger Smith Gallery, NYC
“There Is Always Tomorrow”, Galleria Marabini, Bologna, Italy

2002
"Dubrow Biennale 2002", Kagan Matos galerie, New York
"Building a Collection: recent Aquisitions of Contemporary Art", Boston Fine Arts Museum
"Swing Club", Galerie Michael Janssen, Köln, Germany
1000 Eventi, Mailand, Italy
Galleria Marabini, Bologna

2001
"Superimposition", Caren Golden Fine Art, New York
Eleni Koroneou, Athen
Goldman Teves Gallery, Los Angeles
"Come on Feel the Noice", Asbaek Galerie, Kopenhagen
"Paper Trail, Pt.2", Brett Shaheen, Cleveland, Ohio
"Yello", Frederike Taylor Gallery, New York

2000
"Collector's Choice", Exit Art, New York

1999
Traveling Scholarship Exhibition, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Fifth Year Competition & Exhibition, School of the Museum of the Fine Arts, Boston
Boit Competition & Exhibition, School of the Museum of the Fine Arts, Boston

1997
"Team Adventure", New York Studio Program, New York
Boit Competition & Exhibition, School of the Museum of the Fine Arts, Boston
Dana Pond Competition & Exhibition, School of the Museum of the Fine Arts, Boston

1996
Pond Competition & Exhibition, School of the Museum of the Fine Arts, Boston

   

Torben Giehler

Arndt & Partner
Zimmerstraße 90-91
D-10117 Berlin

+49 (30) 280 8123
+49 (30) 283 3738
arndt@arndt-partner.de
www.arndt-partner.de

   





© Artnews.org About us | Contact | Services | Faq | Terms | Donate | Register | Imprint | Kulturserver