Showing posts with label CORNELIA HEDIGER. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CORNELIA HEDIGER. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

CURRENT EXHIBITION

WE SHOW HERE, DECEMBER 1 – 24, 2016






During the month of December, and leading up to the Christmas and New Year holidays, we are exhibiting a wonderfully diverse selection of contemporary photographs. Each of the artworks are small to medium-sized, framed and ready to be taken away. The perfect 'gift of art'. 

If you don't see what you're looking for on the gallery walls, let us know! We'll dive into the gallery inventory and help you to find the perfect artwork. 

The gallery has artworks ranging in values from $300 through to $68,000. So, whatever your budget, we're pretty certain we have you covered.

Each Saturday, we'll also be offering some special sales, on both artworks and photobooks. These offers will be limited to those specific days, and collectors will be alerted via the Gallery Newsletter. If you're not on our mailing list, you can SIGN UP HERE.



Friday, June 10, 2016

CURRENT EXHIBITION: JUNE 1 – JULY 9

Cornelia Hediger: Puppenhaus
Frederic Weber: Memento Mori & Primary Light

On show, is the highly anticipated Puppenhaus series, by Cornelia Hediger. This forms the artist's third exhibition with the gallery and showcases the artist's handmade photo-collages. Made between 2014–2016, the series is inspired by the likes of Hannah Höch, John Heartfield and Grete Stern among others. The photographs are constructed out of a combination of pigment and gelatin silver prints, with imagery originating from various sources including the artist's studio practice, and scans of wallpaper, paint and cardboard. These are combined with recent photographs of travels in Europe, the patriarchal home in Switzerland and other family artifacts.

The Crucifixion (2016) © Cornelia Hediger

The hand of the artist is up front and center across the Puppenhaus series—pencil marks, irregular cuts left exposed, paint, hanging string, and individual elements attached in low relief, which together draw attention to the unusual focal planes, angles of view and shifts in scale. All of this combines perfectly with the seemingly whimsical narratives, that take the viewer on a journey through the artist's fictionalized world. The use of self-portraiture prevails, linking this series back to the previous Doppelgänger work. We 'Cornelias' having rea, balancing cups, acting out in odd domestic spaces and going on journeys. In one piece, reminiscent of the 19th Century, Chilean Ladies by Spencer y Cia, we see 100 heads—all of the artist—receding back into the distance. Hedger has created theatrical scenes, as if on a stage, images which are extraordinary and which pull you right into their three-dimensional space. 

Frederic Weber brings to his photographic practice, a visual sensibility that challenges the viewer to determine quite what they're looking at. On show are selections from two bodies of work, Memento Mori and Primary Light, both of which draw attention to Weber's penchant for making photographs the don't always look like photographs. 

Memento Mori is constructed from a combination of images, that the artist has excavated from comic books, magazines, newspapers, television, paintings and other printed matter. He presents images of tightly cropped heads of black and African subjects, presenting them almost as relics of time past. The photographs are challenging, almost visually overwhelming, and difficult to fix within a specific framework. At once iconic, they echo historical post-mortem imagery, its a timestamp that is not fixed or even knowable. Made of several layers of different images, the photographs are rich in color and painterly.

Untitled No. 122 (1998) © Frederic Weber

The Primary Light series share this painterly quality. Here though, it is the reference to photograph's Pictorialism past, that is most evident. Weber presents torsos and heads that are rendered in soft-focus, with each emerging from the a depth of blue so saturated, the color transforms into an abyss, out of which the human forms glow like fire-flies. The ghostly figures seem nostalgic, classical even and partly unknowable. 

Both bodies of work by Frederic Weber are produced as Ilfochromes, a photographic process introduced in the 1960s, that is well known for its rich highly-saturated colors. The prints on display are vintage, making this a rare opportunity to view this work as originally envisioned and printed. 

Hediger and Weber are virtuosos of their materials, presenting extraordinary work that is meticulously made and visually stunning. The vision behind each artist's work, is evidence of their respective dedication to studio practices, that have spanned several years, and in which they share a concern for exploring—and exploiting—the photograph as both a tool of record, and a means of expressing a unique creative vision. This is the first time that they are exhibited together, bringing about an interesting curatorial conversation. 

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

AIPAD 2016: CORNELIA HEDIGER


Dr. Christiane S., 2015

Series Title: Puppenhaus
Number of artworks at AIPAD: 3
Edition: 2 + 1AP
Size: Various
Medium: Hand-made photo-collage (mixed media)
Year: 2015–2016

With this new series, Cornelia Hediger brings together meticulously constructed photographs, that are inspired by the photo collages of Hannah Hock, John Heartfield and Grete Stern. The artist builds her fine artworks from a combination of digital and traditional photographs, scanned wallpaper, cardboard and paint. The 'imperfections' are left visible, thus making the work a rich site/sight of construction including irregular cuts and pencil marks. 

The narratives are built from the artist's own biography, family artifacts, memories from her past and images of landscapes from traveling through Italy, Switzerland and Germany. All of these, she combines with photographs made in her New York home and her studio. 

Additional Edition:
18"x18" image on 24"x20" sheet
Silver Gelatin
10+2AP

Cornelia Hediger (b.1967) holds a BA Fine Arts and and MA Fine Arts from the Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University. Her work can be found in several private collections in the US and Europe. She was a PDN's 30 Awardee in 2009, and has exhibited across the US, Canada and Switzerland. She lives and work in New York. 

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Cornelia Hediger's DOPPELGANGER

As art dealers, working with a carefully selected stable of artists, we are often asked how it is that we find our artists and what it is that we are looking for?

05.18.09 Set 1 from the Doppelgänger II series. © 2010 Cornelia Hediger

First and foremost, we respond to that intangible 'spark'. And ... every now and again, you come across work that simply takes your breath away. This is exactly what we experienced when we first set eyes on the work of Cornelia Hediger in the Spring of 2008 at the Center for Photography at Woodstock.

07.10.09 from the Doppelgänger II series. © 2010 Cornelia Hediger

We could not pull ourselves away from the photographs that formed her first Doppelgänger series—in which she explores an internal dialogue and struggle between the conscious and the unconscious. The narratives are complex, expressed through simple assemblage and are photographed to exploit and exaggerate spatiality in the photograph. Each frame is a complete and unadulterated full-frame photograph, lush in color, exquisitely staged and in which Cornelia is both photographer and performer. They are executed to perfection, piercing our appreciation for photography on every level; visceral and intellectual.

 11.17.08 from the Doppelgänger II series. © 2010 Cornelia Hediger

We remember being completely and utterly overwhelmed by them. By a stroke of luck, we had the good fortune to meet Cornelia within hours of first seeing her work—we conversed at length about her photographs and overall artistic practice. There was a mutual synergy and, following a wonderfully long portfolio viewing, we started representing her a week later. In September of the same year, we opened the  2008/2009 gallery season with the very same images that mesmerized us.

In our minds, she is a huge talent, a rare artist who is completely and utterly committed to her creative practice; with a single vision that is uncompromising to the point of being obsessed.

05.29.10 Set 2 from the Doppelgänger II series. © 2010 Cornelia Hediger 

 Three years on and we are now exhibiting Doppelgänger II, Cornelia's second solo show with the gallery and urge our readers in New York to visit the gallery and view the work.