Air de Paris

Thomas Bayrle

20 Apr - 26 May 2012

THOMAS BAYRLE
20 April - 26 May, 2012

Thomas BAYRLE has always cited his time working in a weaving plant as the formal trigger for his practice as an artist. For him the traceries of thread and the assembly line motif tie in with mass communication, the industrialisation of Europe in the 1960s and the similar process China is now undergoing. The threads have become freeway networks and the motifs are shaped by an accumulation of distinct elements; but the whole is always present in the part, the driving force being a full-time, dizzyingly kaleidoscopic similarity of form.

For his second Air de Paris show, Thomas BAYRLE is presenting works from the past that have rarely or never been exhibited, together with very recent pieces.
Among the former are two pictures from 1978 and 1980, painted and repainted – but unfinished because by their very nature they cannot be finished. In the large-format Putzen endless repetitions of cars form the German word for "car wash", but what they primarily offer is a kind of "car dream".
In the big woven cardboard works from his Chinese series of 2005, the interlacings crystallise as Chinese characters that chime with the silkscreened image in a paradoxical but accomplished union of form and content.
In the most recent works, from Bayrle's Agnus Dei series, intertwined freeways morphed into staves for medieval monastic chants signal a return to the mystical inspiration of the big collages of 1985, shown here for the first time: remnants of photographs of urban motifs give rise to big, full-blown roses reminiscent of Angelus Silesius's "The rose is without why; she blooms because she blooms." And so the exhibition foregrounds the metaphorical reach of that foundational factory experience, together with the spiritual dimension so paradoxically associated with it from the very outset. For him the monotony of the assembly line conjures up not just consumerism and mass communication, but also the mystical experience.
Cars, freeways, cities, motifs: all of them come together on the same assembly line. Historical materialism – just like the great mystics – has always insisted that everything is part of everything else.

Born in Berlin in 1937. Lives and works in Frankfurt.
A seminal figure on the German art scene, Thomas Bayrle has been exhibiting around the world since the 1960s, notably at Documenta III and IV. Recently MACBA in Barcelona, MAMCO in Geneva and Museum Ludwig in Cologne have organised solo showings of his work (2008, 2009). He also exhibited at the Venice Biennale in 2009.
His works have been acquired by prestigious private collectors and such leading institutions as the Museum für Moderne Kunst and the Städel Museum in Frankfurt; Museum Ludwig, Cologne; MOCA, Los Angeles; the Limousin Region Contemporary Art Collection in Limoges; and the National Contemporary Art Collection in Puteaux, France.
 

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