•  Installation views - Out of Focus: Photography
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  •  Installation views - Out of Focus: Photography
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  •  Installation views - Out of Focus: Photography
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  •  Installation views - Out of Focus: Photography
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  •  Installation views - Out of Focus: Photography
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Current Exhibition
Current Exhibition
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SELECTED WORKS BY Andrea Lehmann

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Andrea Lehmann
Diamant technik

2005

oil on canvas (diptych)

260 x 400cm
Delving into a girl’s world of fantasy and fairytale, Andrea Lehmann’s Diamant Technik presents a dream-like adventure scene broadcasting both individual and collective desire. Sourcing her material from the internet, as well as her own imagination, Lehmann draws on the style of Japanese animation to encompass an exotic blend of kitsch naiveté and hyper-real sophistication. Translated through painting, Lehmann’s heroic tableau confuses the intimate and the monumental, creating a gushy sentimentality at odds with its computerised origins and awesome scale. Often basing her figures on her own likeness, Lehmann’s paintings become virtual projections of psychological territories, authoring personal identity as alter ego, constructed through the mesmerising and precarious beauty of media saturation.


Often basing her heroines on her own likeness, Andrea Lehmann’s figurative alter egos navigate precarious netherworlds where media and myth combine in fantastical landscapes described as “ultramodern soul mirrors”. Sourcing her material from the internet, as well as her own imagination, Lehmann’s collaged compositions execute girl-power fantasy as ostentatious, larger than life, and hopelessly sentimental. Conceiving her paintings as a form of storytelling, Lehmann’s Diamant Technique draws on the style of Japanese animation to encompass an exotic blend of kitsch innocence and hyper-real sophistication. Working in massive scale, Lehmann broadcasts individual fantasy as collective desire, authoring her escapism with ironic naiveté mimicking the irrepressible jubilance of folk murals and Bollywood billboards.
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Andrea Lehmann
Materialverwechslung

2006

Oil on canvas

210 x 350 cm
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Andrea Lehmann
Goldrush(Woman Conquered Old Hotel to Golden Spider Legs)

2006

oil, dammar and gold on canvas

260 x 375cm

ARTICLES

andrea lehmann

For her galerist, Anna Klinkhammer, the painter Andrea Lehmann has filled a small closet with paintings – even on the ceiling – which simulate a cosmos reminiscent of a stage set. The small room is the heart of her exhibition “Stuffed Diamonds.” In the vein of pulp magazines bearing science fiction, gothic or fantasy covers, the thirty-year-old artist portrays a laboratory in which a young photographer focuses in on aliens. Her medium has tied her to a chair. The aliens’ huntress appears with a camera before her face amidst a display of stuffed birds, deer, branches and poisonous mushrooms.

Behind these dummies is her “laboratory,” painted in somber yet luminous hues and with hyperreal effects. The scenery closes in on the viewer with dynamic as well drawn as an action comic and as true to nature as a house of horrors at an amusement park. But the story’s determined wildness and the arrangement of the paintings, crowded with motifs and placed along the walls with deliberate imperfection, lastingly undermine the naivety of the works’ fairytale-like narrative with the title Faked Proof (Stuffed Diamonds). Decorated with a few real branches and lit by a disco ball, the cave of paintings becomes a complex puzzle of fakes and illusions.

Structurally similar are large-format paintings such as Jelly Goddess or the panorama Diamant Technik, which is made of two stretchers as wide as a movie screen. These, too, are less like film stills and more like a moment at which the plot explodes. Andrea Lehmann can spell out her girlish myths motif by motif to make a story. More than anything, the shimmering giant crystal and the horrible jellyfish arm or black vampire blood are elements of virtuoso painting that uses photo-realism, abstract color progression, extreme perspectives and classic composition to effortlessly produce a thrilling drama.

Read the entire article here
Source: annaklinkhammer.de
Catrin Lorch (translation : Rebeccah Blum / Berlin)