SAATCHI GALLERY
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SELECTED WORKS BY Christoph Ruckhäberle



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Christoph Ruckhäberle

Lake at Sunset

2004
2004, Oil on canvas

279 x 381cm

Christoph Ruckhaberle’s leisurely scenes operate like dysfunctional stage plays. Cribbed from all the best bits of art history, he imbues his scenes with a contemporary newness of vivid patterns and design colours. His elaborate sets are backdrops of static energy against which his cast nonchalantly mingles: placid and bored, unaware of their own interaction with an expectant audience. This sense of waiting is the delight in Christoph Ruckhaberle’s work. Charmed by the pure casualness of it all, his paintings offer the possibility of getting lost in a moment, a luxuriating pause where visual harmony is appreciated as inert ideal.


Christoph Ruckhäberle

Untitled

2004
Oil on canvas

190 x 280cm

The tea party in Christoph Ruckhaberle’s Untitled plays an optical illusion; this pleasant image deconstructs itself into a myriad of coloured components, oscillating between narrative scene and formalist abstraction. Christoph Ruckhaberle approaches this painting as a compositional jigsaw puzzle, each element an individually delineated shape filling a gap in the whole: L-shaped knees disjointedly connect to rectangular skirts and socks, geometric furnishings float without a sense of grounded order. Through subtle repetition of form, Ruckhaberle creates a systemic visual harmony; a contrived soothing comfort through which a surreal suspense passes almost unnoticed.


Christoph Ruckhäberle

Untitled

2004
Oil on canvas

190 x 280cm

In Untitled, Christoph Ruckhaberle's figures languish with models' detached poise; his sybaritic group is neutrally depersonalised as compositional study. Christoph Ruckhaberle renders his characters as emotionally self-contained objects of fetish, their interaction limited to physical positioning: tangled masses of pink forms and dark shadows, right angle patterns of arms and legs, all melodically punctuated by colour co-ordinated accessories. Approaching his painting as a harmonised rhythm of visual components, Christoph Ruckharberle develops an aura of earthy sensuality through the qualities of abstraction and painterly surface rather than narrative characterisation. The central figure reflected in the mirror gives false promise of psychological depth: her self-contemplation reveals only a further complexity of formalist intrigue, and a teasing acknowledgement of historical lineage.


Christoph Ruckhäberle

Plakatwand

2005
Oil on canvas

250 x 340cm

Christoph Ruckhaberle conceives Plakatwand with an intentional staginess. Rendered with the rigid artifice of theatrical backdrops, Ruckhaberle's billboard-scale canvas approaches painting as a vaudevillian construction: a clichéd scene consciously exposing its own formulaic aspirations. Mixing techniques between naïve stylisation and impassioned gesture, Plakatwand is tinged with both humour and pathos. Ruckhaberle pictures the artist/vagabond as a comitragic figure, an idealistic bohemian crippled beneath the proliferation of mass-produced imagery and commercial message. Christoph Ruckhaberle approaches this canvas as several paintings in one: independent territories of brick, sky, wall, figure, become compressed to a single claustrophobic plane. From this referential abstraction, Ruckhaberle poses his painting as a romantically fatalist yet classically spectacular production.


Christoph Ruckhäberle

China

2005
2005, Oil on canvas

250 x 380cm

Christoph Ruckhaberle’s China executes the power of will over logic. Using painting as a tool of invention, Ruckhaberle’s scene defies reason in exchange for paradoxical intrigue. Furniture and tableware fly in violent chaos while retaining an effect of controlled calmness, their psychic energy resonating from the concentrated central figure. Ruckhaberle renders this image with unsettling impartiality; psychological torment becomes a problem of geometric design. Motion is frozen in compositional elegance, fragmented into oscillating squares and orbs. Neutralising his subject matter, Ruckhaberle creates a sense of magic through the complexity of construction, making the impossible accessible through discipline and volition of imagination.



ARTIST INFORMATION




Christoph Ruckhäberle's BIOGRAPHY



1972
Born in Pfaffenhofen, Germany
Currently lives and works in Leipzig

1991-1993
Animation studies, California Institute of the Arts
BFA, Painting, Hochscule fur Grafik und Buchkunst, Leipzig
MFA, Hockschule fur Grafik und Buchkunst, Leipzig, with Prof. Arno
RinkCurrently lives and works in Leipzig


SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS


2005
Galerie Kleindienst Leipzig, Germany
Nicolai Wallner, Copenhagen

2004
Sutton Lane, London
LFL Gallery, New York, NY
Galleri Nicolai Wallner, Copenhagen, Denmark

2003
Malerei , LIGA Gallery, Berlin, Germany

2002
Malerei , LIGA Gallery, Berlin, Germany Malerei ,
Galerie Kleindienst, Leipzig


SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS


2005
Sutton Lane in Paris, Sutton Lane c/o
Ghislaine Hussenot, Paris Cold Hearts: Artists from Leipzig,
Arario Gallery, Korea Reflection Part III, Sutton Lane,
London Baby Shower, Nicolai Wallner, Copenhagen
The Leipzig and Dresden School, 2nd Prague
Biennial of Contemporary Art

2004
The New Leipzig School of Painting, Contemporary
Museum, Baltimore East International, Norwich School of
Art and Design Klarapark, Marianne Boesky, New York

2003
Grasland,Galerie Wassermann, Munich Lazarus Effekt,
Biennal Prague Halbzeit, LIGA Gallery, Berlin Sieben
Mal Malerei, Museum der Bildenden K? Leipzig
Nicolai Wallner, Copenhagen

2002
Wunschbilder, Museum der Bildenden K? Leipzig Convoi,
Metallgalerie, IG Metal, Frankfurt a. Milan
Zweidimensionale, Kunsthalle der Sparkassen Leipzig
Leipzig Lercher Junge Malerei im Kulturhof Flachsgasse, Speyer 5
x 5 junge Kunst aus Sachsen, Neue, Sosische Galerie Chemnitz
Junge Kunst aus Leipzig, kunstverein Sulzfeld 5 aus
11, LIGA Galerie, Berlin

2001
Junge Kunst 5, Galerie Kleindienst, Leipzig Malerei,
LIGA Galerie, Leipzig
Steibs Hof, Leipzig

 


Other artists in GERMANIA:NEW ART FROM GERMANY

Gert & Uwe Tobias | Markus Amm | Dirk Bell | Felix Gmelin | Stefan Kürten | Jutta Koether | Ulrich Lamsfuss | Andrea Lehmann | Jonathan Meese | Kirstine Roepstorff | Julian Rosefeldt | Christoph Ruckhäberle | Corinne Wasmuht | Thomas Zipp
 

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