Graphic Art as Event
June 9–October 14, 2018
Schaumainkai 17
60594 Frankfurt am Main
Germany
Hours: Tuesday–Sunday 10am–6pm,
Wednesday 10am–8pm
T +49 69 21231286
info.angewandte-kunst@stadt-frankfurt.de
In the exhibition Graphic Art as Event, the Museum Angewandte Kunst is devoting itself to the oeuvre of Michael Riedel, which operates on the boundary between applied and free graphics. The show will highlight a work the artist executed at the age of 22 when he was just starting his successful international career: the Signetic Drawing of 1994/95. It consists of over a thousand sheets, among them non-drawn drawings. Purchased by the Städelscher Museums-Verein e.V. in 2016, the Signetic Drawing will now be on view in a museum in its entirety for the first time ever.
Born in Rüsselsheim in 1972, Michael Riedel studied art from 1994 to 2000 at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, the Städelschule in Frankfurt am Main—where he was a master pupil of Hermann Nitsch—and the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts de Paris. Since the summer of 2017 he has been a professor of painting and graphics at the Leipzig Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst.
Riedel’s international career in the art system is based on a master plan which he already set out in Signetic Drawing. He systematically placed his name at the beginning of his artist’s biography and developed his oeuvre from it. The point of departure is the first letter of his first name, “M,” stylized as a decorative initial. By way of subsequent shifts of axis as well as rotations, ground plans and vertical projections, new drawings emerged, sheet by sheet, now in a technical/constructive language. They bear the potential of infinite extension. Offering ever-new possibilities, this extension triggers a continuous process of formation of new forms. The result is an irreversible system of a series of drawings with its own inherent dynamic.
Michael Riedel thus redefines the concept of the artwork as a self-perpetuating system. Process and system become one. The system ensures its continued existence by constantly changing. Riedel succeeds in realizing the conception of a self-producing artwork within the art system.
After the Signetic Drawing, Michael Riedel introduced the theme of reproduction to his oeuvre in publications, posters and wallpaper. He began employing the mediums, printing techniques and graphic forms of applied art and relating them to one another, combining them, forming links between them, charging them with artistic contexts, and taking one artwork as a basis for further works. For example, he transforms posters into artists’ books that double as exhibition catalogues, while the print sheets become new artworks in their own right. Posters can also become unica or wallpaper motifs.
Another source of material for his art production is text—taken from recordings of more than 1,800 hours of his everyday life as an artist. What we have here is a utopia of text that bears little relation to how we generally conceive of communication or legibility. The use of the Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) of various websites, the employment of language recognition programs by which the writing process develops a momentum of its own, the recycling of existing texts by putting its words in alphabetical order… These are all examples of the paths Riedel explores in the surface structures of his materials, and how he plays with various paradigms: on the one hand with a paradigm of the visual arts in which form is content, and on the other hand with a literary paradigm that has taught us to comprehend contents rather than see printed matter. Again and again, by transforming text and the forms of writing associated with it into a visual phenomenon beyond the boundaries of verbal communication, he breaks the mould of the expectable.
Taken as a whole, Michael Riedel’s oeuvre reflects on graphics as a cultural achievement in text and image. He transforms the forms of applied art into issues of the free visual arts and its claim to autonomy. He occupies the art system and takes it further. The art system is thus continually deconstructed and at the same time reconstructed.
The exhibition is being realized with support from the Hessische Kulturstiftung and other sponsors.
Director: Matthias Wagner K
Curator: Eva Linhart
Press contact: Dorothee Maas, T +49 69 212 32828 / presse.angewandte-kunst [at] stadt-frankfurt.de