Thoughts On: Berlin Gallery Weekend (Part Two: Inka Büttner)
Inka Büttner
(hosted by Holthoff-Mokross Galerie, Hamburg) at Paper Positions, Bikini Berlin, Budapester Str. 38-50, Berlin
Image borrowed from: berlinartlink.com"installation view at Paper Positions" Photo by Anna Russ |
On
the evening I arrived in Berlin I was invited by an art journalist friend of
mine to visit the opening of an independent art fair called Paper Positions. It
was not part of the official Gallery Weekend, but was the equivalent of a
satellite show soaking up some of the audience who would be in town looking for
new works to invest in. The premise of the event was to showcase contemporary
galleries from across Northern Europe and having glanced over the promotional
information I thought it worth my while hopping on an S-bahn for. The fair was
hosted by Bikini Berlin, a sprawling “concept mall” in City West and we
initially were turned away by not one, but two bouncers. Clearly we were not
the intended audience and having finally managed to sneak up an escalator and
into the show, we were offered the cheapest white wine.
Half
a glass of vinegar and a quick dash around the fair later a collage of breasts
with black cut-out cats over them, revealing only the nipples- the complete
reverse of any traditional “modesty bar” leapt out at me. The work was by a
Hamburg-artist called Inka Büttner and
being hosted by Holthoff-Mokross Galerie.
I had to find out more and luckily the Gallery Director was nearby and happy to
chat with me.
With
playful eroticism half of Büttner’s
work exists in a state between suggestive pin-up photography and open
pornography. Contrasting the naked with the clothed it is singular, and speaks
confidently of intimacy and solitary desire. Büttner was the partner first of Martin Kippenberger and later Werner
Büttner (whom she married). Having been with two prominent German Artists she has now declared: "In the past ten years, I have no need for men and now I
feel much freer." The collages, like intimate meditations of her own
desire, most certainly reflects this.
The other half of Büttner’s work plays with primary colours, contrasting bold
circles with black and white imagery. Some of her collages directly echo Max Ernst’s Dadaville, Grätenwald or The Fall
of an Angel – though Büttner places obvious allusions to breasts where Ernst’s circular motifs would be. In this way you can see her
playing not only with the basics of the imagery she has gathered but with
various tropes of mixed media and collage art.
I was very
lucky to walk away with a copy of the catalogue for Büttner’s recent show vive les vacances! – gifted to me by
that friendly Gallery Director. It is something I really will treasure. She has
said "Collages are like life
itself," … "They can be dismantled and reassembled at any time. The
constant river fascinates me.” and she is an artist who I can see living up to
her words.
More information can be found at http://www.holthoff-mokross.com/inka-bttner/
More information can be found at http://www.holthoff-mokross.com/inka-bttner/