The Lines of Life
October 14, 2023–February 4, 2024
Schaumainkai 63
60596 Frankfurt am Main
Germany
T +49 69 605098200
F +49 69 605098111
info@staedelmuseum.de
The Städel Museum presents a solo exhibition by Victor Man in the midst of the Old Masters galleries, featuring twenty works by the Romanian painter from the last ten years. The Lines of Life is dedicated to Man’s artistic focus: portraits. In deep dark green, blue, and black, he creates portraits as sensitive as they are enigmatic, dominated by an existentialist, sombre, and introspective tone. Subtle influences of the pre-Renaissance, dense with metaphors, emerge in Man’s melancholic imagery. Stylistically complex and difficult to categorize, his inimitable oeuvre reveals numerous art historical references while at the same time representing a unique position in contemporary painting. At the Städel Museum, a fascinating dialogue between history and the present emerges.
“As a museum of pictures, the Städel is the perfect place for the first institutional solo exhibition of Victor Man’s works in Germany in almost a decade. Man’s oeuvre is committed to painting. Surrounded by the museum’s collection, which spans 700 years, his paintings open a dialogue anchored in the richness of art history. The quiet and timeless portraits appear as an antithesis to our highly technological and complex living environment. Let us see them as an invitation to embark on a quest for the essence of our own existence”, says Philipp Demandt, Director of the Städel Museum.
The title of the exhibition, The Lines of Life, is a quote from Friedrich Hölderlin’s poem To Zimmer (1812) and refers to Victor Man’s close connection to poetry and literature. These references, as well as connections to his own life reality, are repeatedly found in his painting—for example, the individuals depicted in the portraits in the main part of the exhibition come from his family environment and circle of friends. Immersed in predominantly dark scenarios and with a contemplative gaze, the sitters are enveloped in existential heaviness. The paintings bear witness to an intense exploration of human existence and speak of the poetic as well as tragic ambivalence of life. In the second part of the exhibition, the genre of portraiture is continued and at the same time deconstructed with the series The Chandler (since 2013). Victor Man presents the same motif in various paintings, always in a slightly different form—a seated figure with a head on its lap—and invites us to explore our own perception. The Städel Museum brings together all the works from this series, which has rarely been seen in its entirety—including the latest work, which has never been shown before.
Svenja Grosser, curator of the exhibition: “Victor Man’s work is timeless, and his paintings thus resist art-historical classification according to criteria such as style, date of execution, or even the period to which they belong. Multi-layered references from art history and literature also open up a wide range of possible interpretations. However, one thing is always at the center: Victor Man’s entire oeuvre revolves around painting itself and its inherent possibilities to put us as viewers to the test.”
Victor Man (b. 1974) lives and works in Rome and his native city of Cluj (Romania). He represented Romania at the 52nd Venice Biennial in 2007. In 2014, he received the “Artist of the Year” award from Deutsche Bank. His works have been shown in institutional solo exhibitions at the KunstHalle in Berlin, the Zachęta National Gallery of Art in Warsaw, Haus der Kunst in Munich, and most recently at the Museo Tamayo, Mexico City. His works are part of numerous international collections, including those of the Centre Pompidou in Paris, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam, the Contemporary Art Collection of the Federal Republic of Germany, the Tate Modern in London, and the Städel Museum, Frankfurt am Main. Furthermore, his works can be found in important international private collections.
Director: Dr Philipp Demandt
Curator: Svenja Grosser (Deputy Head of the Collection of Contemporary Art)
Press contact: Pamela Rohde (Head of Press and Online Communication): presse [at] staedelmuseum.de / T (+49 69) 605098 170
Press material: newsroom.staedelmuseum.de/en (texts and images for download)