SAATCHI GALLERY
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SELECTED WORKS BY Dirk Skreber



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Dirk Skreber

It Rocks Us So Hard Ho Ho Ho 2

2002
Oil on Canvas

160 x 280cm

It Rocks Us … radiates with the most stylish glamour: a pure liquid horror that is truly breathtaking to behold. The high-gloss sheen of media imagery is reinvented through painterly effect, the medium capitalising on its own qualities of oily seduction and alluding to nothing but its own materiality and surface.

Painted by Dirk Skreber in dispassionate grey tones, the subject matter is completely dehumanised. The double image, like Warhol's prints, suggests an emotional absence. Icy in its clinical detachment, It Rocks Us… offers an empty spiritualism, transfixing the viewer with its awesome and ethereal presence.


Dirk Skreber

It Rocks Us So Hard Ho Ho Ho 3

2002
Oil on Canvas

160 x 280cm

In It Rocks Us… Dirk Skreber sells revulsion on the merits of sex appeal. Painted with the soft focus of advertising, his car crash doesn't glorify death but renders it more intimate through the astringent gloss of pop. Dirk Skreber's mesmerising painting broaches the unthinkable. Alluring in its sterile beauty, the surface promises nothing beyond our commodified conception of the infinite: a terrible fascination glimmering with airbrushed newness.


Dirk Skreber

Untitled

2003
Oil on Canvas

300 x 170cm

Aerial views of surveillance photography and replication of print media are antiseptic placebos of intimacy: unnatural modes of viewing that have become instantaneously familiar, an essentially indifferent way of experiencing the world. Dirk Skreber doesn't strive for photorealism, yet his work borrows from the tropes of mechanical reproduction. Translated into painting, these devices are uncanny. Untitled, a spectacle of catastrophe, becomes a cerebral deliberation of poetic form through Dirk Skreber's intervention.


Dirk Skreber

Untitled

2001
Oil and tape on Canvas

300 x 170cm

Interrupted with harmonious composition of shapes, Dirk Skreber's luminescent colour field is an exercise of pure aesthetics, a painting boasting formal perfection. In Untitled Skreber uses natural disaster as a means to negotiate the problems of painting: the sublime contemplation of modernism is transferred into a more frightening contemporary construct, where personal psychology is subsumed by the public realm. Incorporating tape to create a disjointed effect in the surface, he creates a textural stress undulating beneath the placidity of the scene.

Dirk Skreber reinvents trepidation as a normalised condition of collective consciousness: awe as a symptom of mass-media proliferation; spirituality as an achievement of design.


Dirk Skreber

Untitled

2000
Oil on Canvas

280 x 420cm

Untitled portrays an ordinary image, the kind seen in a million postcards and magazines. Rendered on a monumental scale, Dirk Skreber reconstitutes the mundane as the object of an all-consuming fixation. Completely static, the painting is removed from all measurable qualities of perception. It represents a generic stand-in for overwhelming sensations of inadequacy and incomprehension.

Suspended in time and space, Untitled occupies an incalculable gulf between charisma and disaster, a reflection of the numbing state of contemporary consciousness.


Dirk Skreber

Untitled

1999
Oil, foil tape and foam rubber on Canvas

150 x 250cm

Dirk Skreber's Untitled offers an eerie sense of stillness, his monumental locomotive frozen in a moment of detached anticipation. It's not the actual subject that Skreber portrays but the haunting quality of it. He savours the illusion and contradiction of technique. Merging collaged elements of foil tape and foam rubber into the painterly surface, Dirk Skreber creates a tension between the abstract and representational. The dented steel of the train, the impenetrable gradient of the sky, and uncertainty of the dusty ground belie their artificial construction, each generating an austere, intangible quality. Sublime in their unreality, they culminate in an apprehensive tension where anything (or nothing) might happen.


Dirk Skreber

Untitled (Yellow Locomotive)

1999
Oil, foil tape and foam rubber on Canvas

180 x 200cm

Untitled's aseptic perfection is a result of omission. Made up of conjoining flat planes, the image has a model-like effect. Flawless sky and pristine mechanics allude to precision assemblage: removed of all gritty detail, this tableau has been rendered ideal. The expanse of life-like drifting snow sets the scene in the surreal: helplessly remote, his train exists more as a concept than an actuality. Magnifying the banal, Skreber triggers feelings of anxiety through a sense of pre-determination. Taking advantage of the viewer's conditioning to associate amplified images with historical significance, he paints his yellow train as a toy in a grand master plan designed by the collective conscience.


Dirk Skreber

Untitled

1990
Oil on Canvas

205 x 150cm

Dirk Skreber's futurist building is as alien in its construction as its isolated setting. Stretching to an unlucky 13 floors, this glass skyscraper suggests a contemporary Tower of Babel. Encapsulating the trappings of opulence, Dirk Skreber's precarious structure sits in impending conflict against the encroaching forest, the surrounding territory neatly divided between cultivation and wilderness.

The highly formalised building heightens disorientation, creating an Escher-like turmoil in its effete geometry. The glass casing suggests a terrarium of modern living; a foible society under the watchful gaze of a much more powerful presence.


Dirk Skreber

Untitled

2003
Oil on Canvas

279 x 400cm

Untitled's maquette-like structure offers a surreal mystique both in its setting and construction. Dirk Skreber approaches monochrome painting as a problem of spatiality. His colour field isn't rendered as a flat plane, but as a multitude of layered surfaces. Dull tones advance and recede in muted perspective, each shape seeming to defy gravitational logic.

Dirk Skreber uses aerial perspective to enhance the dizzying effect. The image is in fact a shopping mall roof: a generic icon of lifestyle comfort. Made strange in its oblique angle, Skreber dehumanises the familiar, conjuring ominous thoughts of horror films; inconceivable desolation in a place of intimate consequence.


Dirk Skreber

Untitled

2002
Foam and tape on wood

250 x 150cm

Untitled presents a conflict between presence and absence. Lines cut in relief through a sensuous layer of foam play ‘peepshow', suggesting the outline of a sultry tattoo motif.

Referring to the voyeuristic act of looking through blinds or the low quality transmission of video footage, Dirk Skreber distances the viewer from an intimate reading. Instead, the familiar emblems of sexuality and kitsch simply become a problem of design. Seductive only in the materials of its making, the image floats intangibly between foreground and back. Dirk Skreber paints desire neutralised in a nowhere space.


Dirk Skreber

Tesa-Moll Seele

2004
Foam and tape on wood

330 x 350cm

Skreber's abstract paintings incorporate all the unrest of his pictorial work, but reduce the uneasy tension to a purely formal level. In Seele, Skreber exploits the rough material of the board, exposing the essence of the picture plane, nails and all, as a purely constructed surface. His rigid painted and taped lines subvert the stability of the grid like composition, creating an optical effect of corrugated disorientation.

Carving through his built-up veneer, Skreber subliminally reveals a kissing couple, a provocative image estranged from emotive connotation. Seele blurs the boundaries between sculpture and painting, flatness and perceived space. It is less a painting than a falsified architectural form.


Dirk Skreber

Untitled

1994
Oil on canvas

158 x 191cm

Skreber's figurative paintings are painfully expectant. His imposing scenes of the banal lie in wait, trapped in epic canvases promising imminent drama and historical significance. In Untitled, Skreber's spartan scene of a rural cottage is dissembled through its own making: the tidy precision of the home is rendered surreal by the chaos of the surrounding timber piles; the serenity of the sky is marred by the scratching towers of trees and violent chimney sparks.

The overall effect is one of tenebrous anxiety. The slightly aerial view aggrandises the conceptual scope of the painting. An identical house with identical woods is viewed in the distance: a promise that this creepy isolation goes on for ever.


Dirk Skreber

Untitled

1997
Oil on wood

180 x 75cm



ARTIST INFORMATION




Dirk Skreber's BIOGRAPHY






1961
Born in Lübeck, Germany
Currently lives and works in Düsseldorf and New York

1982-1988
Studied at the Düsseldorf Art Academy

1994-1995
Visiting Fellow at the Karlsruhe Art Academy


SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS


2004
Na(h)tanz Aspen Art Museum, Aspen
Muss et Sin Engholm Engelhorn Galerie, Vienna
Friedrich Petzel Gallery, New York

2003
Painspotting Blum & Poe, Los Angeles

2002
Kunstverein Freiburg, Freiburg
Galleria Gió Marconi, Milan (with Björn Dahlem) Galerie
Luis Campana, Cologne
Galerie Elba Betinez, Madrid (with Björn Dahlem)

2001
Blum & Poe, Los Angeles
Kerstin Engholm Galerie, Vienna

1999
Luis Campaña Galerie, Cologne
Blum & Poe, Los Angeles

1998
Portfolio, Vienna

1997
GalerieBochynek,Düsseldorf
Leopold-Hoesch-Museum, Düren
Luis Campaña Galerie, Cologne


SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS


2005
Present Perfect Friedrich Petzel Gallery, New
York

2004
Claus Föttinger, Hans Schabus, Dirk Skreber Sies
+ Höke,Düsseldorf
raumfürraum Kunsthalle, Düsseldorf
Now Is a Good Time Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York Art Chicago
2004, Chicago

2003
Jetzt und Hier Museum Kurhaus, Kleve 4ever Young
Sommer Gallery, Tel Aviv Blum & Poe, Los Angeles

2002
Permanent Collection, Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt
Viewfinder Arnolfini, Bristol

2001
Far from us, Annet Gelink Gallery, Amsterdam
EU Stephan Friedman Gallery, London
Musterkarte Galerie Elba Benitez, Madrid
Without Hesitation Neues Museum, Weserburg, Bremen

2000
Hypermental Kuntshaus, Zürich
Barbara Gladstone Gallery, New York

1999
Jeffrey Deitch Projects, New York
Kerstin Engholm Galerie, Vienna

1998
Galerie Bochynek, Düsseldorf

1997
Surprise II Kunsthalle, Nürnberg

 
 

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