SAATCHI GALLERY
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SELECTED WORKS BY Josephine Meckseper



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Josephine Meckseper

I Love Jesus

2005
Aluminum, Plexiglas, glass, lights, C-print, metal display stands, plastic mannequin leg, argyle sock, found jewelry, gouache and tape on inkjet print mounted on cardboard, toilet brush, feather duster, acrylic on glass ball, glass vases

226.1 x 116.8 x 45.7 cm

Often using department store display cases and sales ephemera, Josephine Meckseper conceives the art gallery as boutique: a cultural arena where aesthetics merge with ideologies, politics, and lifestyle axioms, levelling all as capitalist bi-product. Originally conceived as a window dressing in NY’s Chelsea district, I Love Jesus hosts images of political protest intermingled with yuppie footwear, bijou trinkets, and pristine cleaning utensils, offset by a placard reading ‘please excuse our appearance’. Adapting the strategies of hard-sell, Meckseper promotes the diaspora of American culture and its (dis)contents as enviable status symbols.


Josephine Meckseper

Talk to Cindy

2005
Aluminum, Plexiglas, glass, lights, metal display stands, painted toilet plunger, ink jet print mounted on cardboard underwear box, found jewelry, gouache and tape on inkjet print mounted on cardboard, found metal scrubber, found jewelry, glass ball,

226.1 x 116.8 x 45.7 cm

In Talk To Cindy Meckseper makes witty juxtaposition of lingerie, consumer brands, and an exquisite toilet plunger. Through these arrangements, Meckseper packages contemporary zeitgeist as an uber-commodity, glamorising problems of class, gender, war, and political dissent as desirable products of choice. Initially shown in the street front window at Meckseper’s New York gallery, several of the displayed items were made by inmates of the adjacent women’s prison. Drawing reference to corporate corruption and social dysfunction, Meckseper implicates art as a transgressive activity born of hierarchy and manipulation.


Josephine Meckseper

Selling Out

2004
Window display with mixed media

78 x 148 x 35 cm

Josephine Meckseper’s Selling Out reconstitutes ‘radical chic’ as a protest in itself. Mimicking both department store display and museum case, Meckseper presents an array of affluent goods for the 'consummate terrorist', framing the banality of consumer fetish as a time capsule of political unrest. Centring her arrangement around a publication on 70s anarchy bombers The Angry Brigade, Meckseper alludes to an subversive coffeetable-isation of violence, setting media, advertising, and middle class values as a backdrop of cultural anxiety and revolution.


Josephine Meckseper

Occident – Orient (RUG NO.3)

2004
Mixed Fabrics

139 X 270 cm

Pieced together from Palestinian fabric, Occident Orient patchworks a conflicting system of ethics arising from globalism. Drawing attention to the adaptation of meaning, Josephine Meckseper’s scarves reference both traditional Muslim headdress andtrustafarian style, entwining capitalism and its consequences in a personalised item of individual conscience. Swatches and bands of colour emerge as both Minimalist and Constructivist associations; ideological territories mapped out and merged as an opulent fashion accessory.


Josephine Meckseper

CDU-CSU

2001
C-Print

106 x 165.5 cm

Labelling her sultry and seductive models with German political party vanity chains identifying the joint Christian Democratic and Christian Socialist Union, Jospehine Meckseper spin-doctors a media savvy image parodying the right wing. Meckseper’s enlarged faux magazine spread updates traditional allegorical painting via woman’s fashion advert, drawing veiled reference to Angela Merkel, the party’s leader and Germany’s first female chancellor. Raising uneasy questions about class, power, nationalism, and feminism, Meckseper portrays her homeland as a twinned stealth-like beauty: Arian perfection garbed in democratic coloured designer gowns, languishing in extravagance and oblivious to the proletariat maid lingering in the distance.


Josephine Meckseper

Untitled

2005
Mannequin, fabric, found jewelry, inkjet print on fabric, acrylic and fabric on canvas.

Mannequin: 144.8 x 66 x 43.8 cm
Painting: 61 x 61 cm
Collage: 41 x 41 cm

Taking her cues from the likes of Bret Easton Ellis, Josephine Meckseper’s installations mirror the nihilist horror of middle class lifestyle. Turning an art exhibition into department store display, Meckseper’s mannequin poses before a gallery hang in hoodie and scarf, the ensemble of choice for both activists and thugs. Ironically coordinated with a stylish abstract painting, and the cover of a terrorist biography, Meckseper’s model creates a totality of image: reflecting a social elite as both cause and symptom of cultural turmoil.


Josephine Meckseper

Ubi Pedes Ibi. Patria. (Where the feet are, there is the fatherland)

2006
Shoes, display carousel

153 x 83cm

Reminiscent of Haim Steinbach’s appropriated objects, Josephine Meckseper’s assemblages recode the familiar through associative interpretation. In Shoes, Meckseper presents the tacky display of a discount store as a slack readymade; its shoddy products simply stand in for themselves as uncanny totems of commodity failure. It’s only through relational affiliation that Meckseper’s remnant footwear takes horrifying form, echoing connotations of poverty, economic migration, the Marcos’s dictatorship, and Holocaust images of piled shoes. Gathering dust beneath blazing orange sale signs, Meckseper marks down wholesale cultural barbarity to bargain basement affordability.


Josephine Meckseper

Pyromaniac 2

2003
C-Print

101 x 76 cm

Josphine Meckseper’s photographs subtly infuse lifestyle ideals with an incitement to revolutionary violence. Using the format of fashion magazines, Meckseper examines how cultural information and its inherent values are packaged and merchandised: beauty, capitalism, and glamour are laid bare and magnified as vacuous imagery transparently revealing their social, political, and economic realities. In Pyromaniac 2, Meckseper’s model is posed with lit match perched between her lips, an emblem of commodified desire transformed to an impending powder keg explosion.


Josephine Meckseper

Untitled (Berlin Demonstration, Fire, Cops)

2002
C-Print

76 x 101 cm

Having worked as a photojournalist for German media, Josephine Meckseper’s demonstration photos capture the cool neutrality of front-line reportage. Shot at a riot near the former GDR HQ, Untitled’s dramatic subject matter neither advocates nor denounces political concern. Photographing protesters, police, and bystanders participating in their expected roles, her images of violent unrest allude to a choreographed theatre, the readily identifiable aesthetics of protest culture transfiguring as stereotyped vogue. In Untitled, a shopping cart blazes against a crowd of cops and demonstrators, framing the iconography of anti-capitalist sentiment as implicitly commercialised fashion.


Josephine Meckseper

RAF Tray

2002
C-Print

50.8 x 40.6 cm

Printed in black and white, Josphine Meckseper’s RAF Tray is reminiscent of the ambient class of perfume adverts, the drama of classic film, and the radical chic of 60s political photos. Staged by Meckseper, her models exude this expectant glamour, femmes fatales peddling image over content. Proffering box of matches on a silver platter, they offer revolution as a bi-product of their conflicting values, sparking a dissident solution to the boredom of privilege.


Josephine Meckseper

Untitled (Berlin Demonstration, Police Brigade)

2002
C-Print

76 x 101 cm

Photographing public demonstrations, Josephine Meckseper embraces an alternative politic of the contradictory messages contained within visual culture. Highlighting the trendy youth culture adaptation of protest chic, Meckseper shoots a line of riot-geared police officers flanked by the impressive columns of government buildings, framing the overlapping connotations of authority, violence, oppression, security, and heroism with the casual flair of a Gap advertisement.


Josephine Meckseper

Tout Va Bien

2005
Mixed media in display window

160 x 250.2 x 60 cm

Appropriating readymade forms, Josephine Meckseper’s assemblages use existing consumer products to reference the complex system of affiliations found in everyday objects. In Tout Va Bien, her showcase combines found and collaged fashion posters with Hugo Boss underwear, ladies hosiery, spangly designer lamp, and loo roll, a pair of suggestive glass bobbles, and an arabesque tower comprised of cola cans and home accessories. Through juxtaposing these disparate wares, Meckseper dissects and reconstitutes they’re layered associations of sexuality, politics, culture, and class. Echoed from behind by a small cracked mirror, Meckseper’s menagerie is reflected as damaged goods, massively discounted beneath the sales sign etched in the window pane.


Josephine Meckseper

The Complete History of Postcontemporary Art

2005
Mixed media in display window

160 x 250.2 x 60 cm

Through her installations, Jospehine Meckseper frames consumerism as a form of protest of choice; her products become activated beyond their saleable function by their staged conjunctions to both contemporary zeitgeist and art history. In The Complete History of Postcontemporary Art, Meckseper utilises the stream of consciousness process of 90s scatter art: as products stand in for themselves humorous associations emerge, as stuffed rabbit, upside down pinups, and patterned stockings wittily implicate Beuys, Baselitz, and Vasarely as models of cultural consumption.


Josephine Meckseper

Untitled (End Democracy) (Detail)

2005
Inkjet print, Plexiglas, plastic mannequin torso, metal stand, mirror on wood

144 x 122 x 122 cm

Josephine Meckseper’s Untitled (End Democracy) uses minimalist aesthetic as a tool of numbing seduction. Set atop a display unit reminiscent of Robert Morris’s mirrored cubes, Meckseper presents a lingerie shop mannequin and a Communist rally poster, converting their cold manufactured presence into a monument of classical heroism. Reflecting its surrounds, Untitled exudes an entrancing charisma, encapsulating all as equal its torpid and alluring wake.


Josephine Meckseper

Blow Up (Michelli)

2006
Mixed media in display vitrine

208.3 x 243.8 x 68.6 cm



ARTIST INFORMATION




ARTICLES



Josephine Meckseper’s exhibition at Elizabeth Dee entitled %

For her new exhibition, entitled %, the artist will transform the gallery into an environment redolent of both consumer capitalism and political protest. Starting with the faade, Meckseper will alter the windows of Elizabeth Dee Gallery to resemble the dramatic display windows of an upscale department store. Mixing semantic codes, the objects on display in one window will seem to sell a vision of current American politics, while the other will offer images of an oppositional culture of protest and references to the womens correctional facility across the street. Vinyl lettering suggests the monolithic encroachment of a homogenizing globalism in a leveraged buyout and merger of New Yorks most prominent museum, gallery, and exhibition sponsor.

Inside, Koolhaasian wood paneling, mirrored tiles, and mannequins sardonically recall the spectacle of avant garde architecture in the service of retail, while a papered wall combines reminders of an obsolescent cold war with the pattern of kefiyah scarves favored by Palestinians and protesting hipsters alike. Mirrored display cubes and wall-mounted shelves round out the complement of fixtures, but on them consumer products are juxtaposed side-by-side with paintings, collages, sculptures, and photographs evoking counter-cultural activity, including the artists own documentary images from the anti-war protest in Washington on September 24 of this year.

Mecksepers work equates our induced desire for fashion and luxury goods with the manipulations of media-driven ruling regimes, but it likewise compares both of these to their supposed antithesis in political protest movements. Partisan politics is just another status symbol. Radicalism quickly becomes radical chic, which is presented as just another formal element to be fetishized and sold in a museum cum gallery cum boutique that nostalgically samples utopian dreams from the Russian Constructivists to 1960s hippies. As the curators of the 2005 Lyon Biennale write,

in Mecksepers work politics becomes a style, and commitment an object to be displayed in a chic display cabinet, suggestive of those in museums and ethnographic societies. Through this approach, Meckseper explores the questionable links the media establish between images of political news, the fashion industry and advertising.

Read the entire article here
Source: re-title.com



Art in Review; Josephine Meckseper
By Roberta Smith

Josephine Meckseper's show is a total environment riven with interesting cracks. Elegantly mirrored, paneled and shelved, it has the stark, slightly too-bright emptiness of an abandoned high-end boutique occupied by style-conscious anarchists. At first the second New York gallery show of this German-born, New York-based artist swings anemically between the obvious and the lazy - not an engaging range of motion. But look again and the piece functions as walk-in Conceptual Art. Enveloped in a brittle glamour, its desiccated scraps mine the overlap of art, politics and consumerism.
Outside the gallery's soaped-over front door, forlorn window displays acknowledge both the real and the plausible: the Women's House of Detention across the street, and the imminent arrival of a business named DR Gagosian UBS. Inside, a hammer and sickle sit on a mirrored cube, and the Texaco star doubles as the Red Star. A red-and-white sign blares SALE. Mannequins, glass baubles and toilet-bowl cleaners alternate with collages that mix black lace, scraps of Palestinian scarves and Constructivist geometries. One collage mentions the Angry Brigade, a group of British anarchists believed to have bombed more than 100 sites (including a Biba boutique) in the early 1970's, without casualties.

Read the entire article here
Source: New Tork Times
 


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