1 5 2 3 8, Rhythm Section, Augsburg (I)
1 5 2 3 8
Rhythm Section
Kunstverein Augsburg
Holbeinhaus
Vorderer Lech 20
Augsburg
Germany
June 4 – July 30, 2023
Hours: Tue–Sunday, 11 am – 5 pm
Guided tours: Tuesday, June 6, 4:30 pm,
and Tuesday, July 11, 4:30 pm
Opening: Saturday, June 3, 2023, 6 pm
Curator Sophie-Charlotte Bombeck will talk with participating artists about their work as a collective, rhythmic structures and art as a universal language.
Participating artists: Anneke Bosma (NL), Karina Bugayova (DE), Albert Coers (DE), Iemke van Dijk (NL), Daniel Geiger (DE), Lon Godin (NL), Henriëtte van ’t Hoog (NL), Gonghong Huang (CN/DE), Michaelis Karaiskos (GR/GB), Liu Ke (CN), Oleksiy Koval (DE), Guido Nieuwendijk (NL), Artemis Potamianou (GR), Thomas Rieger (DE), Marije Vermeulen (NL), Veronika Wenger (DE), Michael Wright (GB/IE), Tang Xiao (CN).
Rhythm Section consists of artists from various disciplines who explicitly and consciously deal with the theme of rhythm in their work. The core that unites the group is the commitment to a hyper-reflexivity in dealing with rhythm, not as a constraint but as an original constant. The exchange and dynamics that arise from the different approaches and media provide new approaches to art and its practice.
The exhibition 1 5 2 3 8 provides for the first time a retrospective overview of the various activities of the group, which has been working together since 2010. In addition to the exhibition, there will be a side programme of workshops, performances and artist talks. In cooperation with Villa Waldberta (Feldafing), members of the group from China are invited to an artist residency.
Rhythm and Method, Wuhan (I)
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:
Curators: Li Jianchun (CN), Laura Sánchez Serrano (DE)
A Question of Rhythm and Method
Preface by Laura Sánchez Serrano in the catalogue
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.
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.