SELECTED WORKS BY Inka Essenhigh
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Inka Essenhigh
Subway
2005
oil on canvas
198. x 177 cm |
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Inka Essenhigh paints Subway as a commuters’ opera. Her smooth surface and seamless paint replicates the sublime precision of urban life. Essenhigh’s corporate toned environment becomes a stage on which her strange and distorted figures conjoin in symphonic movement, leaving plastic trails in their haste as they swoon through the scene. Turning everyday banality into surreal case study, Essenhigh gives humorous portrayal of people at their rush hour worst. Drawing stylistic reference from both graphic novels and golden age animation, caricatured city-types gain comically heroic status, rendering a humble slice of America as grand theatrical drama. |
Inka Essenhigh
Blue Wave
2002
2002, oil on canvas
178 x 188cm |
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Appropriating the theme of Katsushika Hokusai's The Great Wave, Inka Essenhigh's Blue Wave crests with sculptural solidity. Essenhigh deviates from the flat designs and enamel application of her early work. Using oil paint she infuses her scene with manufactured vivacity: this heroic depiction of nature is rendered with the aesthetics of computer animation. Like Hokusai's woodcut print, Essenhigh uses the stillness of stylised formations to contemplate the drama of a raging seascape. Flaunting their artificiality, the turquoise waves seduce with a certain menace, their razor sharp peaks extending with decorative threat. |
Inka Essenhigh
Shopping
2005
2005, oil on linen
178 x 193cm |
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"I think about [my paintings] as being about America: fake, fun, pop, violent, but also quite attractive," Inka Essenhigh explains. In Essenhigh's most recent work, images from suburbia convolute into grotesque dreamscapes; her pastoral scenes of normality belie their true nature as instances of alien horror. In Shopping, Essenhigh readily captures the greed of a chav-land mall with cartoonist's exaggeration: shell-suited blonds undulate with flirtatious curvature, arms cum tentacles slither for bargain goods. In distorting the scene, Essenhigh draws humorous caricature as well as a heightened sense of plasticity; the women resemble figurines in a themed setting, mannequins illustrating their own insincerity. |
Inka Essenhigh
Supergod
2004
2004, oil and enamel on canvas
183 x 188cm |
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Inka Essenhigh translates the subtle qualities of drawing into luxurious paintings. Resonating with exquisite draughtsmanship, Supergod is reminiscent of the design purity of the art deco era. Painting in oil and enamel, Essenhigh uses the cool gloss effect of her media to create a sense of hyper-artificiality: her flat surface possesses a richness of synthetic colour, deceptive in illusion of depth and luminosity. Influenced by 19th century caricatures, oriental art, and contemporary comics, Essenhigh's paintings are both exotic and operatic: envisioning futuristic mythologies frozen in sublime moments of suspended animation. |
Inka Essenhigh
WWF
2002
2002, oil on canvas
183 x 203cm |
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Inka Essenhigh's paintings redefine pop as the epitome of aesthetic hierarchy. Her ultra-slick surfaces operate as virtual fields, where estranged narratives play out in cross-wired systems of reference and recognition. In WWF, Essenhigh draws from romanticised emblems of decadence: the classicism of Greek frescos or the empyreal motifs of Asian lacquer-ware are resembled with futuristic technophilia, made more dynamic in the fantasy realm of cartoon. The god-like figures contort in a stylised motif of aestheticised violence and sexuality. Essenhigh's highly structured formalism eschews emotional intimacy; line, space, and colour are used to create stunning tension, a baroque beauty that is majestically antiseptic. |
Inka Essenhigh
Pup Tent
2004
2004, oil on canvas
183 x 152cm |
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In Pup Tent, Inka Essenhigh shifts to a more realistic style with poetic sensitivity, translating her graphic designs into a softly rendered 3D world. Her mythological scene unfolds with the compositional order of her earlier enamel paintings: compacted configurations, affiliated by trailing ephemera, engulfed by a swooping mass of flowing motion. In this new painterly language, Essenhigh gives real tangibility to form: her figure comes to life with porcelain-like delicacy, and the fabric flows with defined texture rather than calligraphied patterns. Trading her factitious palette for gothic monochrome, Essenhigh capitalises on the richness and depth of the medium to create a painting that is elegant and haunting. |
Inka Essenhigh
Pegasus
2001
2001, oil on canvas
267 x 220cm |
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Pegasus is a celebration of sinuous, elegant, energetic drawing. Focusing on mythical horses, Essenhigh delights in the curving, twisting lines of their flowing manes and muscular bodies. Like many of the figures in her recent paintings, they seem on the point of bursting out of the image, momentarily stilled in a quivering evocation of throbbing energy and life. |
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ARTIST INFORMATION
Inka Essenhigh's BIOGRAPHY

1969
Born, Belfonte, Pennsylvania
1991
Columbus College of Art & Design, Columbus, Ohio
1993
School of Visual Arts, NYC
Currently lives and works in New York
SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS
2005
DA2 Domus Artrium 2002, Salamanca, Spain.
Victoria Miro Gallery, London.
2004
Sint-Lukas Galerie, Brussels, Belgium.
Michael Steinberg Fine Art, New York.
2003
Museum of Contemporary Art, Miami.
The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh, Scotland.
Galleria Il Capricorno, Venice, Italy.
2002
303 Gallery, New York.
Victoria Miro Gallery. London.
2001
Works on paper, Mary Boone Gallery, New York.
2000
Victoria Miro Gallery, London.
Mary Boone Gallery, New York.
1999
New Paintings, Deitch Projects, New York American
Landscapes: recent Paintings by Inca Essenhigh, New Room of Contemporary
Art, Albright Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY
1998
Recent Paintings, Stefan Stux Gallery, New York.
1997
Wallpaper Paintings La Mama La Galleria, New York.
SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS
2004
Perspectives at 25, Contemporary Arts Museum,
Houston, TX
SITE Santa Fe Biennial, Santa Fe, New Mexico
Bienal de Sao Paolo, Brazil
2003
Supernova: Art of the 1990s from the Logan Collection,
San Francisco, Museum of Modern Art, CA Reverie: Works from
the Collection of Douglas S. Cramer,
The Speed of Art Museum, Louiseville, Kentucky Drawing,
G Gallery, Washington, DC Heaven & Hell, Barbara Mathes
Galley, New York Painting Pictures: Painting and Media in the
Digital Age,
Kunstmuseum Wolfsberg, Germany
2002
Go Figure, curated by Michael Steinberg and Stefan Stoyanov,
Luxe Gallery, New York Comic Release: Negotiating Identity
for a New Generation
Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA (travelling to The Center
for Contemporary Art, New Orleans, LA; University of North Texas, Denton,
TX; Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA)
2002
Pertaining to Painting, curated by Paola Morsiani,
Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, TX la part de l'autre, Carré
d'Art, Musée d'art contemporain, Place de la Maison Carrée,
Nimes, France art in the 'toon age, Kresge Art Museum,
Michigan State University, MI Jay Davis, Inka Essenhigh, Christian
Schuman, Angstrom Gallery, Dallas, TX
2001
Casino 2001, 1st Quadrennial of Contemporary Art, SMAK
(Stedelijk Museumvoor Actuelle Kunst), Ghent Works on Paper:
from Acconci to Zittel, Victoria Miro Gallery, London My
Reality: Contemporary Art and the Culture of Japanese Animation
Des Moines Art Center, IO (will also be exhibited at the Brooklyn Museum
of Art, New York; Contemporary Art Center, Cincinnati, OH; and Tampa
Museum of Art, FL) Hybrids, Tate Gallery, Liverpool, England
Works on paper, Victoria Miro Gallery, London
2000
To Infinity and Beyond, Brooke Alexander, New York Emotional
Rescue, Center for Contemporary Art, Seattle, Washington Deitch/Steinberg:
New Editions, Deitch Projects, New York The Figure: Another
State of Modernism, Newhouse Center
for Contemporary Art at Snug Harbor Cultural Center, Staten Island,
NY Greater New York: New Art in New York Now, P.S.1 Contemporary
Art Center, New York
1999
To Infinity and Beyond, Brooke Alexander, New York Pleasure
Dome, Jessica Fredericks Gallery, New York A room with a view,
Sixth @ Prince Fine Art, New York
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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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