Press Release

Galerie Greta Meert is proud to present its second exhibition (first in 2015) of works by German artist Anne Neukamp (b. 1976, lives and works in Berlin, Germany).

Anne Neukamp’s work is characterised by image worlds that move freely between figurativeness and abstraction. Her visual language lets you discover familiar forms, beginnings of well known objects and figures that at the same time become part of a transformation into a seemingly recognisable visual in-vention. The motifs and elements Anne Neukamp uses in her work derive from our everyday decor, the image archive of the consumer society. Icons, punctuation marks, digital 3D models and clip art that saturate public and private spaces serve as ‘found’ images and udergo a series of methodical transforma-tions by way of compositional process, coming together in new and different ways, stripped of their univalent impact.

The title of this exhibition makes reference to a painting of Magritte Les Objets Familiers from 1928, where 5 men are portrayed while staring blankly at a seemingly random object, associated with the mental states of the depicted figures. Anne’s work relates to this surrealist approach to the unconsciousness by questioning, exploring and reconstructing the meaning of symbols in our world. The envelope icons, paperclips, hashtags, cans and keys are part of the artist’s visual vocabulary, that is anchored in visual communication and linked through a certain symbolic or psychological potential.

By juxtaposing and compounding oil, acrylic and tempera paint she develops rich contrasts in her paintings and exhibits a technical, mechanical approach through construction and repetition–ordinary objects become almost fetishised, their original context and significations distorted, pushed ad absurdum.

This manipulation leads to a total loss of hierarchy among the depicted ele-ments, and lends a sense of fragments drifting in and out of consciousness.

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About the Artist

Anne Neukamp (b. 1976, Düsseldrof, Germany) lives and works in Berlin, Germany. The motifs and elements she uses in her work derive from our everyday decor, the image archive of the consumer society: cartoon characters and mascots, heraldic details, letters from the newspaper, and advertising pictograms. She allows these functional signs and images, designed for efficiency, to become fragments beneath layers of paint or even to disappear entirely; she puts them together in new and different ways, stripping them of their univalent impact. Her works move within a logic of shifting and undermining and stimulate the most diverse interpretations. At the same time, through their occasionally cheeky imagery, they appear to flirt with the expectations of the market.

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About the Gallery

Over the past 30 years, Galerie Greta Meert established itself as one of Brussels’ leading contemporary art galleries. Founded in 1988 as Galerie Meert Rihoux, it was subsequently renamed after its founding director Greta Meert in 2006. Located in the center of Brussels, the gallery occupies a five-story Art Nouveau building designed by Louis Bral and renovated for the gallery by renowned Belgian architects Hilde Daem and Paul Robbrecht. Since 2012 three floors of the building are dedicated to exhibitions, making it possible to maintain an expanded exhibition schedule.

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Address
13 Rue du Canal
Brussels
Belgium
Opening Hours
Tues - Sat, 2pm - 6pm
(1)
Brussels 13 Rue du Canal
Galerie Greta Meert
13 Rue du Canal, Brussels, Belgium

Opening hours
Tues - Sat, 2pm - 6pm
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