mai 36 galerie : KOENRAAD DEDOBBELEER - Remember to Remember - 18 Jan 2008 to 23 Feb 2008

Current Exhibition


18 Jan 2008 to 23 Feb 2008
Hours : Tue - Fri: 11 a.m. - 6.30 p.m.
Sat: 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Mai 36 Galerie
R�mistrasse 37
CH-8001
Zurich
Switzerland
Europe
p: +41 44 261 68 80
m:
f: +41 44 261 68 81
w: www.mai36.com











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Mai 36 Galerie

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Stefan Thiel
John Baldessari
Thomas Ruff



Artists in this exhibition: KOENRAAD DEDOBBELEER


KOENRAAD DEDOBBELEER - Remember to Remember
Opening: Thursday, January 17, 2008, 6 to 8 p.m.
Exhibition duration: Januar 18 to Februar 23, 2008
Opening hours: Mo-Fr 11 a.m. to 6.30 p.m., Sa 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.


We have pleasure in presenting new installative works by the Belgian artist Koenrad Dedobbeleer (* 1975 in Brussels, lives and works in Brussels) in our next exhibition. His work was recently exhib�ited in the temporary "Museum X" in Monchengladbach and the Galerie Micheline Szwajcer in Ant�werp, last year in the Benedengalerij in Kortrijk, and in 2005 in the Musee des Beaux Arts in Dijon, as well as in galleries in Vienna, Aalst and Grimbergen. An exhibition project by Koenraad Dedobbeleer and Rita McBride is planned in Autumn 2008 at the Kunsthalle Bern in Switzerland.

Koenraad Dedobbeleer's way of working is very conceptual, and he constructs references and narrations that nevertheless turn out to be the result of perception. The artist works with everyday objects, which he liberates from their original utility value. Or he creates objects whose individual elements appear to be generally familiar, but which nevertheless have a disquieting effect. From time to time he draws our attention to the structures of the exhibition venue by emphasising them. Far from producing ready-mades, Dedobbeleer reinterprets these manipulated elements and distorts their meaning in order to examine them more effectively. With a view to the specific exhibition venue, the artist frequently modi�fies functional objects such as tables, perforated partition walls or pillars, often using photographs, projections and films, or single elements such as words or arguments. These objects and elements are successively developed into larger entities and combined to form their own rooms, real art venues that can be atmospherically charged. His objects belong may be regarded as something between sculptures and coi"rRrt"tMttes. They -fill and accentuate his installations which frequently occupy a whole hall. And although we may intuit a narrative thread, the conclusive legibility of a potential narration does not emerge. Rather, the visitor's perceptual and adaptive skills are tested in that the objects are removed from their usual associations and placed in a different context.

For Mai 36 Galerie, Dedobbeleer created an installation in which the individual elements are arranged in a discursive constellation. Thus one piece of work comments on another, while others may appear to be incompatible. The whole show is organised as a construction and is intended to provide an insight into the way the exhibition is organised. One minute shows an exposure or a portrayal of a clear decon-struction, the next reveals the deconstruction about to self-destruct. And yet all Dedobbeleer's works possess an inner logic, and the manipulations are comprehensible in the context of the installation, regardless of whether the work in question is a sculpture that serves simultaneously as a plinth, or a photograph of a sculpture or, more accurately, an object that can be read as a sculpture on the grounds of its arrangement. Or found objects that have been enlarged and which continue to refer to the original while simultaneously assuming a different form. This strategy enables Dedobbeleer to charge the exhi�bition premises with a special significance, thus ensuring that the object will be interpreted in a specific way. Dedobbeleer uses deconstruction and manipulation as means to reveal connections between, spaces and objects and to plumb the depths of the presence of things. [Text: Dominique von Burg, Translation: Maureen Oberli-Turner]