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The Lupertz effect

By Lin Qi | China Daily Africa | Updated: 2017-04-21 09:07
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Tsinghua University Art Museum holds first solo show of a living artist with works of German neo-expressionist

Tsinghua University Art Museum, which officially openedin September, is presenting its first solo exhibition by a living artist.

From Dithyrambe to Arcadia showcases 88 paintings and 16 sculptures by German neo-expressionist Markus Lupertz.

It is not Lupertz's first encounter with a Chinese audience. People here know the 76-year-old artist from his large pieces which are often characterized by rough strokes and vivid colors.

 

MARKUS LUPERTZ, German neo-expressionist. Provided to China Daily

In 2015, Return of Western Paintings, an exhibition of his creations over the past decade, toured Beijing and Guangzhou.

The ongoing show in Beijing reiterates his long-term pursuit to present the divinity in painting, even as more artists today work with mixed media or employ digital technology. It includes works from throughout his 50-year career, starting with the Dithyrambe series of paintings in 1962 and progressing to the Arcadia series he began in 2011.

"Painting is spiritual. It is a dream that surpasses many image processing technologies," says Lupertz.

Feng Yuan, director of the Tsinghua museum, says that although neo-expressionist works were first introduced to China in the late 1980s and early '90s, and influenced many homegrown artists, the style remains unfamiliar to general audiences. He hopes Lupertz's works will bring the style, which emerged in the 1970s in reaction to pop-art and minimalism, closer to Chinese viewers.

His repertoire on show begins with his paintings from the 1960s, after he moved to Berlin and was inspired by German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche's theories on poetry. Then it moves to his German motifs series in the following decade, in which he reflected upon World War II. His use of certain objects that symbolize the Nazi period aroused debate at the time.

His works from the 1980s show a marked shift in his practice: He became interested in Greek myths and began making sculptures. In 1988, he was appointed dean of the Dusseldorf Academy of Fine Arts, which has produced many internationally notable artists. He stayed in that position until 2009, during which time he continued his experiments with painting.

The latest Arcadia series of paintings on show is one of his prolific endeavors after leaving the academy in the German city of Dusseldorf. Unlike his earlier works, they feature a moderate palette to demonstrate his philosophical thoughts on reality and mournful resonance with the past of human society.

Lupertz, who inaugurated his own exhibition at Tsinghua on March 27, says the show is also a chance for him to "retrace" his youth, especially the energy with which he worked. He wants to keep going for "another 20 years", he says.

Looking at the works on display, he feels both "happiness and strangeness of reunion", and they enable him to review his "ideals to persist with painting".

Calling painting an age-old skill, Lupertz says: "This trade of antiquity produces generations of artists. At a time when machines have replaced many handmade skills, making it more convenient to create images, many artists still paint."

He adds that painting can bring misery to artists, because they often don't feel satisfied with their work and destroy their own creations with the same hands that created them. But even in such moments, instances of delight keep artists like himself going, which is why he would not abandon art.

The process of discovery of new approaches to painting is also to "release one from the control of advancing technology, and, therefore, gain the freedom to imagine".

"If artists never stop racking their brains, painting will not lose its divinity," he says.

Lupertz's exhibition has an "exclusive" German sponsor, Bell Art Centre, an institution that has been active in exhibiting Western art in China in recent times.

All shown works come from a private German collection called the MAP Collection. It was one of the two sources of works shown at Anselm Kiefer Coagulation, an exhibition dedicated to the art of Anselm Kiefer, 72, also a German neo-expressionist representative, held from November to January in Beijing. The Bell Art Centre was one of the organizers.

But Kiefer himself didn't attend the exhibition, as he said in a statement that it was organized without his permission or involvement. His disapproval was supported by several influential international galleries representing his works, such as the Gagosian and the White Cube.

At the opening of his Tsinghua show, Lupertz said the shown works speak from "the perspective of a single collection", implying they are not encompassing of all his oeuvre. That apart, he seemed to be enjoying his trip to China. He held a dialogue with the elite university's art and design students and even played the piano. He visited the workshops of several professors too.

He says he doesn't want to be an ardent lecturer here but, instead, he "looks for nutrition from Chinese cultural traditions".

"China has excellent art and there is no need to build an internationalized standard for painting," he says.

"When one keeps discovering inner energies of painting, his works will create extensive influence worldwide."

linqi@chinadaily.com.cn

(China Daily Africa Weekly 04/21/2017 page20)

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