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Eckhart J. Gillen

    Aufbau. Arbeit. Sehnsucht
    Boris Lurie and / und Wolf Vostell
    Otto Nagel
    Silvia Dzubas, The Lost Letters
    • 2022

      Boris Lurie and / und Wolf Vostell

      Art after the Shoah / Kunst nach der Shoah

      The art of Boris Lurie (*1924, Leningrad) and Wolf Vostell (*1932, Leverkusen) is determined by the breach of civilization in Germany in 1933, which made the German genocide of German and European Jews possible. Both artists make the Shoah the subject of their work in a radical way. Initially working-independently of one another-with the means of painting, they turned during the 1950s to exploring the stylistic devices of the first avant-garde, including techniques of collage and montage. Vostell later develops the subject further in his happenings and video art while Lurie takes up writing. In 1964 the artists met in New York and began a lifelong friendship-this is the first exhibition to present their works together. After surviving several labor and concentration camps, the Jewish artist BORIS LURIE (1924-2008) emigrated to New York in 1946, where he established the NO!art movement in 1959. Often through direct references to the Shoah, Lurie commented on the society and consumer culture of his time. The German artist WOLF VOSTELL (1932-1998) was a protagonist of the Fluxus movement and a pioneer of happening- and video art. Vostell confronted post-war European audiences with its recent past in a variety of ways.

      Boris Lurie and / und Wolf Vostell
    • 2020

      Silvia Dzubas, The Lost Letters

      Katalog zur Ausstellung im Epigrafischen Museum Athen, 2021

      The catalog showcases the work of Berlin-based artist Silvia Dzubas, coinciding with her exhibition at the Epigraphic Museum in Athens from March 8 to May 18, 2020. It highlights her unique integration of elements from Greek, Hebrew, and other alphabets into her abstract paintings, reflecting a fusion of cultural influences and artistic expression.

      Silvia Dzubas, The Lost Letters