Posts Tagged ‘Anselm Kiefer’

Unearthed – Over Your Cities Grass Will Grow

Monday, August 1st, 2011
Film still from Over Your Cities Grass Will Grow, 2010 Directed by Sophie Fiennes.

Film still from Over Your Cities Grass Will Grow, 2010 Directed by Sophie Fiennes.

Sophie Fiennes’ film Over Your Cities Grass Will Grow, is a meditative and mostly wordless portrait of Anselm Kiefer’s studio in Barjac in France. Keifer left his native Germany in 1993 and took over a derelict silk factory, La Ribaute, in the South of France. It was an industrial landscape surrounded by woods, which Kiefer transformed by excavating subterranean passages, caverns and tunnels to create an ever-evolving architectural space.

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Anselm Kiefer’s Remembrance of Things Past

Friday, November 12th, 2010

By Kiša Lala

ANSELM KIEFER Fitzcarraldo, 2010 Oil, emulsion, acrylic, shellac, ash, thorn bushes, resin ferns, synthetic teeth, lead and rust on canvas in glass and steel frames © Anselm Kiefer. Courtesy Gagosian Gallery

ANSELM KIEFER Fitzcarraldo, 2010 Oil, emulsion, acrylic, shellac, ash, thorn bushes, resin ferns, synthetic teeth, lead and rust on canvas in glass and steel frames 130 11/16 x 302 3/8 x 13 13/16 inches (332 x 768 x 35 cm) © Anselm Kiefer. Courtesy Gagosian Gallery

To experience Anselm Kiefer’s new exhibition at Gagosian Gallery is to enter a monochromatic forest with walls of flaking, mud-encrusted canvases that transport us into a world at times foreboding, at others, shamanic and mystical.

Anselm Kiefer Speaking at 92Y  photo: K.Lala, 2010

Anselm Kiefer speaking at 92Y photo: K.Lala, 2010

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Cy Twombly’s Ceiling at the Musée du Louvre, Paris

Friday, August 6th, 2010
View of the The Louvre's ceiling by Cy Twombly

View of the The Louvre's Ceiling by Cy Twombly Photo: Christophe Ena

Giotto's star-ceiling in the Cappella Scrovegni, Padua.

Giotto's star-ceiling in the Cappella Scrovegni, Padua.

Cy Twombly’s newly commissioned ceiling at the Louvre in Paris is monumental in scale, and covers more than 350 square meters. It was painted with the assistance of several artists and apprentices in a warehouse outside Paris before being affixed like wallpaper to the ceiling of the Salle des Bronzes. Looking up one sees an immense blue sky, painted with spheres and white insets inscribed with the names of leading Greek sculptors from the 4th century: Cephisodotus, Lysippus, Myron, Phidias, Polyclitus, Praxiteles and Scopas. The round shapes appear like shields, planets, or coins, while the blue background evokes either the sky or the sea.

Cy Twombly is the third contemporary artist invited to install a permanent work at the Louvre. He follows in the footsteps of a long lineage of artists including Le Brun, Delacroix, Ingres that have been honored in this tradition.  In the 20th century, the invitation has been extended to Georges Braque, (who has painted a ceiling with black birds against a starry midnight-blue sky ) and more recently to François Morellet, and in 2007 to Anselm Kiefer.

Though Twombly is American born, he has been living in Italy since 1959, and this work not only evokes the spirit of the Mediterranean, but also the colors of Chinese prints, and the lapis lazuli paint used by Italian Renaissance artist Giotto – who the artist says he has also been inspired by.

By Kiša Lala