Saturday, April 23, 2022

Artist of the Day, April 23, 2022: Katharina Fritsch, a German sculptor (#1553)

 Katharina Fritsch (1956) is a German sculptor. She lives and works in Düsseldorf, Germany.

Fritsch was born in West Germany. She first studied history and art history at the University of Münster and, in 1977, transferred to Kunstakademie Düsseldorf where she was a student of Fritz Schwegler until 1984.

Fritsch is known for her sculptures and installations that reinvigorate familiar objects with a jarring and uncanny sensibility. Her works' iconography is drawn from many different sources, including Christianity, art history and folklore. She attracted international attention for the first time in the mid-1980s with life-size works such as a true-to-scale elephant. Fritsch's art is often concerned with the psychology and expectations of visitors to a museum.

Gary Garrels wrote that “One of the remarkable features of Fritsch’s work is its ability both to capture the popular imagination by its immediate appeal and to be a focal point for the specialized discussions of the contemporary art world. This all too infrequent meeting point is at the center of her work, as it addresses the ambiguous and difficult relationships between artists and the public and between art and its display—that is, the role of art and exhibitions and of the museum in the late twentieth century.”  The special role colour plays in Fritsch's work has roots in her childhood visits to her grandfather, a salesman for Faber-Castell art supplies, whose garage was well-stocked with his wares.

Her most recognized works are Rattenkönig/Rat King, a giant circle of black polyester rats, included in the Venice Biennale in 1999. Other works include Mönch (Monk), a stoic, monochromatic male figure, made of solid polyester with a smooth, matte black surface; Figurengruppe / Group of Figures, an installation of nine elements; and Hahn/Cock, a 14 ft (4.3m) cockerel in ultramarine blue to be shown on London's Trafalgar Square Fourth plinth from July 2013 to January 2015.

In her working process, Fritsch combines the techniques of traditional sculpture with those of industrial production. While many of her early works were handcrafted, Fritsch now makes only the models for her sculptures and then hands these over to a factory for production, to "near-pathological specifications". She uses these models to create moulds, from which the final sculptures are cast in materials such as plaster, polyester and aluminium. Many are made as editions, meaning that multiple casts are taken from one mould. For the duration of some of her exhibitions, Fritsch has made her multiples available for sale at the respective museums.

When working with human forms, Fritsch often collaborates with a model named Frank Fenstermacher. One of her muses, he “stands for the generic ‘man’” in works such as her three ‘bad’ men: The Monch, the Doktor and the Handler. Fritsch explains her prolonged working relationship with Frank in terms of expression: "Somehow Frank's able to express what I want to express. I don't know why. Maybe he looks a little bit like my father, or like me. And he's a kind of actor. It's very strange how he can change from one character to another without appearing to do anything. He's always the man." Fritsch's process in creating human figures is similar to her animal or object creations, except a live human is involved. She takes photographs of the model, trying out ideas and recording the details of the model's position. In the creation of the mold, she and her plaster technicians cover the model in vaseline and create the mold on top. After a dramatic, near death situation in which Frank was covered in too much plaster and turned blue, with his head “lolling forwards” Fritsch has made fully body casts from mannequins. She still uses human models for the face and hands of her figures. After Fritsch is happy with the plaster mold, she uses silicon to make a negative model and then polyester to create a positive form from the silicon.

In her work, Fritsch has been credited in continuing the work of Marcel Duchamp by responding to his ideas and change viewers’ perceptions of them. For example, Fritsch's first major piece in the Museum of Modern Art's collection was Black Table with Table Ware (1985). It, outside of a museum, could be seen as an everyday object but it is “strangely symmetrical” and placed in a museum context, changing the viewer's approach to it, much like Duchamp.

© 2022. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Katharina Fritsch or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only

Ms. Katharina Fritsch

 Essen, 1956
Le chat, 1981-89

 Madonnenfigur, 1982 Madonna Figure

  Black Table with Table Ware, 1985 
 Elefant, 1987 Elephant
 Gehirn Gips, 1987
Display Stand with Madonnas, 1987-89

 Tischgesellschaft, 1988 Company at Table

 Tischgesellschaft, 1988 Company at Table

 Warengestell mit Gehirnen, 1989 Display Stand with Brains
Man and mouse, 1991-92
 Rattenkönig, 1991-93 Rat-King
 Panther,1992-94
 Pudel, 1995 Poodle 
 Kind mit Pudeln, 1995-96 Child with Poodles
 Händler, 2001 Dealer
 Schwarzer Schirm, 2004 Black Umbrella
 Woman With Dog, 2004 detail
 Woman With Dog, 2004
Garden Sculpture 1 (Torso), Postcard 1 (Essen) 2005-06
Group of Figures, 2006-08
Bettlerhand, 2007 Beggars Hand
 Heiligenfigur (St. Michael) 2008 Figure of a Saint (St. Michael)
Apple (Apfel) (for Parkett no. 87) 2009–10
 Oktopus, 2010 Octopus
 6. Stilleben, 2011 6th Still Life
Still life, 2012
 Hahn, 2013 Cock
 Hahn, 2013 Cock
Muschel (Rosa) 2013 Shell (pink)
 Riese, 2016 Giant
  Installation view, 2017 Matthew Marks Gallery
 Zwei Männer, 2019 Two Men 

 

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