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ROBERTS & TILTON
5801
Washington Boulevard
Culver
City, CA 90232
USA
T
+323.549.0223
F
+323.549.0224
Eberhard Havekost
Print, B10, 2010
Oil on
linen
74.75 x
47.25 in (189.9 x 120.0 cm)
Eberhard Havekost
Take Care
February
26 – April 2, 2011
Opening
Reception Saturday, February 26th, 6 – 8pm
Roberts & Tilton is pleased to announce, Take
Care, an exhibition of new paintings by Berlin based
artist, Eberhard Havekost. Works included in Take
Care, Havekost’s second show at Roberts & Tilton,
will travel from the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen in Dresden,
Germany. These recent paintings investigate the relationship
between painted images and photographic sources, from which
Havekost typically derives his motifs. Havekost’s photographic
references drain the image of its recognizability and as Barry
Schwabsky notes in the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen’s catalogue,
Ausstellung:
It is liable to distort or decontextualize and
thereby alienate things from their images, and this tendency
of the photograph to alienate its referent is clearly
something that greatly interests the artist. For this reason
one would be tempted to describe many of his more recent
paintings…as abstract. But on further consideration, it would
be better to resist that temptation; it would be better to say
that they are like abstractions, or that they resemble
abstractions, than that they are abstractions. If anything, it
would be preferable to say that they are representations of
something that refuses to be identified.
But what about the paintings—and there are many of
these as well—in which the motif is quite legible? […] One has
no trouble naming the motifs of these paintings. But still, in
these cases, there is a certain invitation to project, as in
the quasi-abstractions, and also a similar evocation of the
futility of doing so. In the depictions of figures, this can
at least in part be accounted for by the fact that in every
case, the face is obscured.
Gamboni has pointed out that ambiguities which
invite the viewer’s imaginative projection are favored by the
Romantics […] Havekost is no Romantic. The “abstinence
from imagination”(1) evidenced by his reliance on photographic
sources allies him with the Realist tradition from Courbet
onward. In this Realism lies Havekost’s contemporaneity.
Today, the imagination is no longer opposed to matter, but
assumed to be one of its manifestations. Our propensity to
project meaning into meaningless images no longer appears to
be liberating but compulsive.
That’s why the beauty of Havekost’s paintings is
melancholy. […] Eberhard Havekost’s works conjure a similar
relationship in how they apply simplification by subtraction
to the subjects they portray.
____
(1)Gamboni, p. 61, borrows
this phrase from Werner Hoffmann, “Die Geburt der Moderne aus
dem Geist der Religion,” in: Lutherund die Folgen fur die
Kunst (Munich 1983), p. 59
Eberhard Havekost’s paintings have been the
subject of solo exhibitions at Schirn Kunsthalle, (Frankfurt),
Stedelijk Museum (Amsterdam), Museu de Arte de São Paulo (São
Paulo), Museu Serralves, Porto (Portugal), Museum Frieder
Burda (Baden), National Art Museum (Beijing), Zabludowic
Collection (London), Rubell Family Collection (Miami), Galerie
Gebr. Lehmann (Dresden and Berlin), White Cube (London), and
Anton Kern Gallery (New York). Havekost’s work is
included in the permanent collections of the Museum of
Contemporary Art (Los Angeles), the Museum of Modern Art (New
York), the Tate Modern (London), Neue Nationalgalerie im
Hamburger Bahnhof (Berlin), Kunstfonds des Freistaates Sachsen
(Dresden) and the Städel Museum (Frankfurt).
Gallery hours are Tuesday – Saturday
11:00am – 6:00pm. For additional information, please contact
Lauren Kabakoff at lauren@robertsandtilton.com or
323.549.0223.
Eberhard
Havekost
Cut 2, B10,
2010
Oil on linen
59 x 39.5 in (149.9 x 100.3
cm)
Eberhard
Havekost
Flatscreen 2 (1,2,3),
B10, 2010
Oil on linen
Each painting: 43 x 27.5 in
(109.2 x 69.8 cm)
Eberhard
Havekost
Lachs, B11,
2011
Oil on linen
35.5 x 23.66 in (90.2 x 60.1
cm)
Eberhard
Havekost
Goin' Off, B10,
2010
Oil on linen
47.25 x 31.5 in (120 x 80
cm)
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