Neo Rauch: DAVID ZWIRNER.
Witten, Robert Pincus
Neo Rauch was born in 1960 in Leipzig, once a major artistic center
despite the inhibiting strictures--propagandistic and
utilitarian--imposed by the USSR on the art of the Eastern Zone. Yet
these past two decades have seen Rauch rise from local star to
international idol, owing to his virtuoso, ironic reworking of socialist
realist tropes--a mode of considerable stylistic fascination especially
following the fall of the Wall in 1989. When now seen, whether in the US
or in Germany, Rauch's paintings possess an incongruous punch quite
different from that of works by East German artists who fled to the West
before reunification. In the headiness of their escape, Sigmar Polke and
Georg Baselitz struck out from the tabula rasa once forbidden to them,
while Rauch, ever at home in Leipzig, continued to create large,
illustrative figure compositions. But for all his skilled command, more
than a touch of farcical camp attends his May Day romps--a seriousness
that resists being taken seriously.
Since name is destiny, one is tempted to imagine that "New
Smoke"--after all, that is what Neo Rauch means--would also have
felt the need for a radical new beginning. Smoke is a loaded word in
Germany, invoking as it does the lingering odor of the crematoria--an
essential subject for Polke or Anselm Kiefcr--and officious repression:
Ranch en Streng Verohoten! (Smoking Strictly Prohibited!), for example,
is a command particularly evocative of Germany's authoritarian
national character. But no reinvention overtook Rauch, save perhaps for
a dose of comedic Surrealism.
Here, the offbeat spatial discontinuities typical of Rauch's
earlier work are now more illusionistically coherent, even if the
near-distemper dryness of his painting still recalls both the stage
flats of theatrical decor and the haranguing propagandist billboard. In
Fundgruhe (Treasure Trove) (all works 2011), corny, invented
"abstract" sculptures, and in Turme (Towers), curiously flat
architectural elements project mockery toward other successful
contemporary art, be it German or otherwise. Mixed-period costumed
figures again proliferate: Ware (Goods) depicts draftsmen at work who
may recall Karl Marx, Sigmund Freud, or the burly supernumeraries of an
Oktoberfest who somehow wandered into the canvas. In Turme, such stray
fellows are contrasted with a brilliantly rendered rhinoceros-like
creature (clearly referencing Albrecht Durer's famous 1515 woodcut
of a rhino), while the painting's architectural church steeples and
towers--cartoon diagrams in the background--are slightly wicked
put-downs of Bernd and Hilla Bechcr's blunt photographs of
industrial structures.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The iconography of Rauch's new work references, in particular,
that moment when the Northern Gothic elided into the German and Lowland
Renaissance. This darker aspect is proclaimed by several depictions of
women holding birds, as in his new large bronze sculpture of a woman
holding a falcon, Die Jagerin (The Huntress). (A riposte to Jeff
Koons's Kiepenkerl, 1987?) These women evoke Durer's brooding
Melancholia, 1514, or the witches of Martin Schongauer rather than a
placid Athena as the incarnation of wisdom, for whom the owl is avian
insignia. They certainly are not erotic. The creepier of these covens is
in the Pieter Bruegel-like Aprilnacht (April Night), with its
protagonists holding birds and masks of birds all marked by a striving
Surrealist overreach that allies Rauch with the kitschy bird women found
in late Max Ernst.
Clearly I both admire and mistrust "New Smoke' in his
role as Till Eulenspiegel, the mischievous Till "Owlglass" of
German folklore. These prankish new works are gathered here under the
rubric "Heihtatten" an archaic German word for
sanatoriums--that is, places of healing, such as thermal baths. Rauch
supplies images of such locales in the eponymous work, a large canvas
that reads like a group of postcards strewn one beside the other. It may
well be that these new compositions depict places of rationalist calm,
quite like the tubercular resort in Thomas Mann's The Magic
Mountain (1924), which offered solace to a Europe turned topsy-turvy by
World War I--but I don't think so.