Image: Serpentine Opens Its First Solo Exhibition of Georg Baselitz
© Georg Baselitz 2023. Photos: Hugo Glendinning, 2023.
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Serpentine Opens Its First Solo Exhibition of Georg Baselitz

6 October 2023

BY MARK WESTALL

Serpentine has opened its first solo exhibition of Georg Baselitz (born 1938 in Deutschbaselitz, Saxony). It includes a series of sculptures and drawings as well as a monumental nine-metre-tall sculpture Zero Dom (Zero Dome) within the Royal Parks, presented for the first time in the UK.

These pieces offer an intimate glimpse into the artist’s studio practice and explore the frailty of the body in relation to the highly physical and raw processes he employs to make the works.

The exhibition follows a long history of presenting sculpture inside its galleries and in the park including major shows of Henry Moore (1978), Anthony Caro (1984), Louise Bourgeois (1985, her first in a UK institution), Alberto Giacometti and more recently Nairy Baghramian and Phyllida Barlow.

Sculpture is a thing like a miracle. It is built up, decked out, made arbitrary not as the sign of thoughts but as a thing within the limits of the shape. Even if a sculpture is hung from the ceiling, it remains a thing. My carvings are best described by Immanuel Kant: ‘Out of the crooked wood of humanity, nothing entirely straight can be built. It is only the approximation of this idea that nature imposes upon us. — Georg Baselitz

With a career spanning over six decades, Georg Baselitz emerged in post-war Germany as one of the most influential contemporary artists of his generation. Since 1969, he has inverted the human figure and other motifs in his expressive paintings to sever his works from content and narrative. Instead, Baselitz focuses on form, colour and texture, bringing new perspectives to the tradition of figurative painting. Baselitz turned to sculpture in the 1980s, continuing to explore the tensions between the figurative and the abstract through his crude approximations of figures and body parts carved from wood.

Georg Baselitz: Sculptures 2011-2015 features wooden sculptures which have never been exhibited before. These works are presented alongside related drawings rendered in pencil, pen and ink. The exhibition offers a unique opportunity to gain insights into Baselitz’s sculptural process, highlighting the latest developments of the artist’s practice during this period. Baselitz turned to sculpture in the 1980s, continuing to explore the tensions between the figurative and the abstract through his crude approximations of figures and body parts carved from wood. These wooden sculptures were not originally intended for public exhibition, as they were made as maquettes for bronze works.

Each one is carved from a single tree trunk, reduced by using power saws, axes and chisels. This method gives form to solid, impactful figures while maintaining the materiality of timber with distinctive incisions and notches on its surface. The accompanying drawings were made not as preparatory sketches for the maquettes, but during the sculpting phase.

Together, the drawings and maquettes highlight the synthesis of Baselitz’s two- and three-dimensional ways of making and explore the possibilities and impossibilities of translating from painting to sculpture, and from sculpture to drawings.

Serpentine is honoured to stage this incredible body of wooden works and related drawings, which have never been presented to the public before. Aligned with Serpentine’s ethos of spotlighting pioneering figures and following a tradition of presenting outstanding sculpture shows, we are thrilled to introduce these works to the public. The dialogue and resonance with contemporary artists and Serpentine’s history, shine a new light on Baselitz’s eminent and influential oeuvre. — Bettina Korek, CEO, Serpentine, and Hans Ulrich Obrist, Artistic Director, Serpentine.

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