Rhythm and Method, Wuhan (I)

Rhythm and Method. Abstract Art in China and Germany
Hubei Museum of Art
Hall No. 3/4/5/6
1 Sanguandian Donghu Road
Wuhan, Hubei
China

June 28 – August 4, 2013
Opening: June 28, 2013, 3:30 pm

 
Participating artists: Chen Ruobing (CN), Huang Gonghong (DE), Henriëtte van ’t Hoog (NL), Oleksiy Koval (DE), Yuliia Koval (DE), Li Lei (CN), Li Peng (CN), Li Zhanhao (CN), Kuros Nekouian (DE), Stefan Schessl (DE), Tang Xiao (CN), Yu Xiaozhen (CN)

Curators: Li Jianchun (CN), Laura Sánchez Serrano (DE)

 
A Question of Rhythm and Method
Preface by Laura Sánchez Serrano in the catalogue

Bars VI, 2012

Art schools or art movements used to be a phenomenon on a regional or national scale. However, in the last few decades, we have witnessed a process of globalisation that has significantly impacted the development of art and the way we understand it. Thanks to the Internet, new media and low-cost flights, art has become a global issue, allowing artists and curators to establish new methods of collaboration and cultural enrichment. Such is the case for the exhibition Rhythm and Method, Abstract Art in China and Germany. Initiated by the artists – already a sign of how things are changing in the cultural field – the exhibition aims to create a Sino-German dialogue between contemporary artists specialising in non-figurative art.

Taking the concepts of Rhythm and Method as a starting point, the exhibition highlights the similarities and differences between abstract art in Germany and China, building a bridge for cultural exchange and artistic dialogue. Rhythm and Method represent intriguing principles for understanding and appreciating abstract art: one focuses on composition and the other on procedure. Rhythm is a term normally used for music and literature, defined as a strong, regular, repeated pattern of movement or sound. In visual arts, rhythm is created through the repetition, alternation or gradation of pattern on a surface. Our eyes follow the surface, where patterns are arranged in a certain order, enabling us to experience the whole as a visual melody in time. Method describes the specific procedure used to accomplish a work of art. It refers to the specific technique used by the artists, the particular way they apply it and how their personal technique affects the result. There is no method without rhythm, nor rhythm without method. Method is the structure that allows rhythm, the engine that turns chaos into logical order.

Bars VIII, 2012

Bars VIII, 2012

In the case of the German group of artists, rhythm is the basis of their artistic research, the framework for their theoretical work. In 2010 Oleksiy Koval, Stefan Schessl and Kuros Nekouian founded the “Rhythm Section” group, a collective that supports artists in exploring the theme of rhythm through exchanges and exhibitions. Members of the group consider rhythm as the key for the perception and reception of art. But they all use rhythm in a personal way, expressing their own talent by different means, whether it be through geometrical compositions, in the case of Henriëtte van ’t Hoog and Oleksyi Koval, lyrical arrangements, in Yuliia Koval’s works, organic structures, typical of Kuros Nekouian, or expressive strokes, in the paintings of Stefan Schessl or Huang Gonghong.

The Hubei Museum of Art in Wuhan is showing works from the German “Rhythm Section” group for the first time, in dialogue with those of six renowned Chinese artists. It is an ideal scenario for creating intellectual exchange and stimulating debate about abstract art, immersing the visitor in a world of visual sensations connecting East and West.
 

Hydrography II, Haarlem (I)

Hydrography II
De Vishal
Grote Markt 20
2011 RD Haarlem
The Netherlands

April 27 – June 9, 2013
Opening reception: April 28, 2013, 4:00 pm, by Sipke Huismans
Hours: Tue–Sat 11 am – 5 pm, Sun 1–5 pm

 
Participating artists: Beate Terfloth (DE), Brent Hallard (US), Caroline de Lannoy (GB), Clary Stolte (NL), Eric de Nie (NL), Henriëtte van ’t Hoog (NL), Iemke van Dijk (NL), Ine Dammers (NL), José Heerkens (NL), Lon Godin (NL), Marie Thurman (FR), Mark de Weijer (NL), Oleksiy Koval (DE), René van den Bos (NL), Riki Mijling (NL), Sipke Huismans (NL), Werner Windisch (DE).

Guest curators: Henriëtte van ’t Hoog, Iemke van Dijk, Ine Dammers.

 
De tentoonstelling Hydrography II brengt zeventien kunstenaars bijeen die in hun werk gebruikmaken van waterverf. Zij passen het materiaal op onconventionele wijze toe. De essentiële eigenschappen van waterverf, zoals de grote kleur- en lichtkracht en de transparantie, zijn autonoom aanwezig in de werken, die qua uitgangspunt en werkwijze onderling heel verschillend zijn. De kunstenaars hanteren allen een abstracte vormentaal.
 

Flat Colour, Paris

Installation view: Ditty Ketting, Marije Vermeulen (3x), Guido Nieuwendijk (2x), Henriëtte van ’t Hoog (2x). Photos: Richard van der Aa.

Installation view: Ditty Ketting, Marije Vermeulen (3x), Guido Nieuwendijk (2x), Henriëtte van ’t Hoog (2x). Photos: Richard van der Aa.

Flat Colour
ParisCONCRET
5 rue des Immeubles Industriels
75011 Paris
France

April 13 – May 4, 2013
Hours: Wed–Sat, 2–6 pm, during exhibitions
Opening: Saturday, April 13, 5–8 pm

The artists will be present at the opening and you are warmly invited to attend.

 
Participating artists: Henriëtte van ’t Hoog, Ditty Ketting, Gracia Khouw, Guido Nieuwendijk, Marije Vermeulen, Guido Winkler.

 

Gracia Khouw (4x), Guido Winkler (3x), Henriëtte van ’t Hoog, Guido Nieuwendijk, Marije Vermeulen

Gracia Khouw (4x), Guido Winkler (3x), Henriëtte van ’t Hoog, Guido Nieuwendijk, Marije Vermeulen

The exhibition Flat Colour presents different approaches to colour in minimalist painting. Colour is essential in the work of the six Dutch artists Henriëtte van ’t Hoog, Ditty Ketting, Gracia Khouw, Guido Nieuwendijk, Marije Vermeulen and Guido Winkler, where it is used in the flattest possible way for maximum spatiality. This way colour manifests itself most purely, as light or vibration, independent from matter and form.

‘Flat’ also refers to the low lands, the uniform light over the polders, monotonous suburbs and cityscapes. It raises questions about the influence of the composition of the Dutch landscape on the images created. For these artists, flat views seem precisely to intensify the need for colour!
 

Point of Interest, Vienna

Foton XIX, 2012, 50x31x15 cm

Foton XIX, 2012, 50x31x15 cm

Point of Interest
Galerie Lindner
Schmalzhofgasse 13/3
1060 Wien (Vienna)
Austria

February 21 – March 29, 2013
Hours: Tue–Fri 2–6 pm and by appointment
Opening reception: Wednesday, February 20, 7–9 pm

 
Participating artists: Wolfgang Berndt (DE), Stephan Ehrenhofer (AT), Anette Haas (DE), Henriëtte van ’t Hoog (NL), Ray Malone (GB), Tim Stapel (DE), Don Voisine (US), Guido Winkler (NL).

A selection of works by eight artists who were featured in the exhibition FutureShock OneTwo, galerie dr. julius | ap, Berlin, in 2012.

 
Henriëtte van ’t Hoog participates with Bars III, Contour VI and Foton XIX.
 

Supermarket, Stockholm

Core IV, 2012, 19x20x13 cm

Core IV, 2012, 19x20x13 cm

Supermarket Independent Art Fair
Kulturhuset
Sergels torg
Stockholm
Sweden

February 15–17, 2013

 
Henriëtte van ’t Hoog’s Core IV is on view in the booth of IS-projects, Leiden, together with works of Iemke van Dijk, Ditty Ketting, Peter Luining, Guido Nieuwendijk, Paulius Nosokas, Marije Vermeulen, Jan Maarten Voskuil, and Guido Winkler.

 
The goal of Supermarket, the international artist-run art fair, is to provide a showcase for artists’ initiatives from all over the world and to create opportunities for new networks in the Swedish as well as the international art scene. The exhibitors are generally not-for-profit exhibition spaces.
 

The booth of IS-projects at Supermarket, Stockholm. Photo: Guido Winkler.

The booth of IS-projects, Leiden at Supermarket, Stockholm. Photo: Guido Winkler.

Space, Expanding, Staphorst (I)

Xtra (Yellow), 2012, 55x26x18 cm. Photos: Paul Vos de Wael.

Space, Expanding
Galerie Hein Elferink
Kastanjelaan 5
7951 KD Staphorst
The Netherlands

December 1, 2012 – January 13, 2013
Opening: Saturday, December 1, 3–5 pm
Finissage: Sunday, January 13, 2–3 pm
Hours: Thu 2–6 pm, Fri–Sat 10 am – 6 pm, and by appointment; also open on December 9, and January 13, 1–5 pm

Participating artists: Henriëtte van ’t Hoog, Gracia Khouw, Mischa Rakier, Sonia Rijnhout.

 
Catalogue of Space, Expanding in PDF


From Gracia Khouw’s preface in the catalogue:

Facet I, 2012, 43x41x13 cm

Facet I, 2012, 43x41x13 cm

In cosmology there is a theory that the universe is expanding at an ever-increasing rate. Started from a small universe that sprayed apart with a big bang, this unknown force is still continuing and increasingly pushes galaxies apart. This takes place in a time and space that are almost unimaginable and immeasurable for us.

Scientific discoveries about the universe expand our perception and provide a framework for the imagination. Painting does this as well. If you stand in front of a painting, you dive into the time and space of the painting. The eye sees lines, surfaces, colour and paint in a certain order and puts the imagination to work, looking for meaning that relates primarily to our immediate surroundings, the habitable world. But what if the meaning refuses to be reduced to the reality as we experience it in everyday life?

In the exhibition Space, Expanding four artists are brought together who investigate ‘space’ in a manner akin to thinking about the universe. Unlike an architectural, habitable room you can build, which has dimensions through which you can walk, there is also space that denies any such foothold. Imagine a space that is continuously expanding and where there are no fixed dimensions or distances. What effect will that have on our perception of depth, motion and matter?

The artworks in Space, Expanding approach space differently from what we are accustomed to seeing. At first glance, they proceed from a recognizable starting point, such as perspective, grid lines, text, images or reflections of reality, but on closer inspection each image contains within itself multiple representations or propositions of reality.