Wasserzeichen. Comics über das fluide Element
Wasserzeichen. Comics über das fluide Element
30 May to 2 JuneKunstpalais, Basement
Öffnungszeiten:Thu 12:00 p.m.–7:00 p.m., Fri/Sat 10:00 a.m.–7:00 p.m., Sun 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
Free admission with festival pass!
Anyone who makes comics must be able to abstract. But this is not about abstraction as a concept, as found in painting or other visual arts. Abstraction in comics has a narrative function: how do you reduce the complexity of reality without simplifying it? How can you create a vivid image with a few strokes, section lining or colour?
The exhibition is dedicated to these technical aspects of drawing and allows artistic reflections on technique and material. Taking the depiction of water in comics as an example, a variety of ways of capturing this fluid element on the page will be demonstrated. Comics and illustrations from very different eras, regions of the world and styles are juxtaposed: Camille Jourdy meets Will Eisner and Gipi. Martin tom Dieck enters into a dialogue with Catherine Meurisse, Suehiro Maruo and Loustal. Jacques Tardi meets Hervé Tanquerelle and Emmanuel Lepage. Other artists represented in the exhibition are Winsor McCay, Dominique Goblet and Kai Pfeiffer, Davide Reviati, Olivier Schwartz and Barbara Yelin. The selection is completed by two animated films by Tove Jansson and Hayao Miyazaki. They are all united by the masterful depiction of an element of global social significance, which seemingly eludes static depiction with brush and pencil due to its fluidity. However, the exhibited works - some originals, some reproductions - show the aesthetic worlds that abstraction opens up and how it can change and revitalise our perception of reality.
Thematically, visitors are guided through the various forms and states of water: After an excursion to oceans, seas and lakes, they are washed by a river into a misty rainy landscape. They then find themselves under water and end their journey in a world of snow and ice. The visit to the exhibition is not a purely visual experience, but also an auditory one: sound installations in the room, composed for the exhibition by the Berlin musician and cross-media artist Erich Lesovsky, amplify and expand the visual worlds evoked in the works.
Lilian Pithan