Few 20th century
objects other than Gerrit Rietveld's Rot-blauer Lehnstuhl (Red-Blue
Armchair) dating from 1918-23 have so permeated our consciousness that
the view we take of them determines our assessment of a thing's 'value'
- usefulness? beauty? functionality ? or: furniture? sculpture? three-dimensional
image? The rational form and primary color scheme of Rietveld's original
combined with the Utopian view that removing the boundaries between
works of art and items for everyday use revealed a vision for the ideal
design of the world around us. Anyone sitting down in the Armchair was
'released' from the senseless pragmatism of industrial society, instead
being 'elevated' into a world postulating the congruency of beauty,
usefulness and humanity.
Two of the younger
artists in our Minimalism and Applied exhibition take Rietveld as their
starting-point for relocating - one could also say: earthing - Rietveld's
Utopia for our day. Nic Hess's reconstruction of the Rot-blauer Lehnstuhl
gives it a majestically high back and fixes it to the floor with tapes.
Richard Merkle's Wandstühle (Wall Chairs), like Rietveld's chair,
make the functional elements visually intelligible by allotting them
colors, but at the same time shift pure functionality towards a minimalistic
pictorial language.
Seats as objects
that can possess both useful and aesthetic elements are one characteristic
of the exhibition. First of all we have two 20th century classics, Max
Bill's/Hans Gugelot's 1954 Ulmer Hocker (Ulm Stool), and two chairs
designed by Donald Judd in 1987. But the show also includes an outstanding
contemporary designer, Konstantin Grcic, using his black upholstered
chair called Chaos (1999): Georg Winter has given the Grcic chair a
bolster and provider users of the ensemble with a monitor as a medium
for contemplative thought.
Three artistic approaches - Zobernig, Zittel, Shirayama - address coming
to terms with American Minimal Art in the 1960s. Zobernig's eight colored
plastic foam cubes, originally designed for his UTV Fernsehstudio (UTV
Television Studio), can be positioned in the space like a minimalist
sculpture by Robert Morris, but when placed on one side they produce
an unconventional seating landscape. Andrea Zittel's A-Z Pit Bed, tailor-made
for the collection in 2001, is an equally unmistakable and irresistible
invitation to sit down, read, talk. Zittel has moved Judd's Minimal
furniture further towards the present day. Ultimately the most recent
reference to Minimal Art - to John McCracken in this case - leans against
the wall in the form of the beer bench with luminous color accents by
Meg Shirayama, born in London in 1980.
The names of Bill
and Judd have already identified the presence of classical artists in
the Minimalism and Applied field. They are joined by the artists Stankowski,
Arakawa, Libermann and Albers, designers Noguchi and Krenchel, and the
architect Renzo Piano, whose designs connect up with his master plan
for Potsdamer Platz. We are showing one of Bill's reduced linear pictures,
as well as applied objects.