Page 30 - Studio International - January 1965
P. 30

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                                                                                 as a  rhythm  in  the  rhythm  of  Nature.  Perhaps  that  is
                                                                                 one of the few ways in which he can  be  ·seen'  today.
                                                                                  One finds a  more direct attack  but  also  more  depen­
                                                                                 dence on the past in two young women painters. Sarah
                                                                                 Schumann  showed in  the early summer at the  Galerie
                                                                                 Parnass  in  Wuppertal.  Eila  Hershon  later at the  Niepel
                                                                                 Gallery  in  Dusseldorf.  They  are  complimentary  oppo­
                                                                                 sites.  Eila  Hershon.  the  elder.  is  American  born.  Her
                                                                                 influences though are  Beckmann and  Kokoschka. both
                                                                                 of  whom  one  finds  in  other  young  painters  here  just
                                                                                 now.  She  paints  her  nudes-couples.  mothers  and
                                                                                 children.  sometimes  a  woman  with  a  dog-with  a
                                                                                 strange.  deliberate  clumsiness.  The  heavy  limbs  are
                                                                                 packed and folded yet they seem transparent. There  is
                                                                                 an almost bull-like power in the forms which makes one
                                                                                 think a little of the mother-architypes of  Henry  Moore.
                                                                                 At present the strongest paintings are the big gouaches.
                                                                                 Sarah  Schumann's  influences  go  a  little  farther  back.
                                                                                 to the world of  Klimt and  Redon.  almost with  a touch
                                                                                 of  the  Pre-Raphaelites.  But  they  have  traversed  the
                                                                                 surreal atmosphere. At present the painter has only one
                                                                                 theme.  an  imaginery  self-portrait.  here  double.  there
                                                                                 plain. or again as a landscape-element. The heads seem
                                                                                 to develop  less out of the painting process than  to  be
                                                                                 projections. slides of a vision so to speak. Yet the forms
                                                                                 are  precise.  the  colour  subtle and the irony  deep.  Like
                                                                                 Marie  Laurencin.  Sarah  Schumann  makes  a  statement
                                                                                 as a woman.  We are still too neo-primitive in  taste for
                                                                                 her work to be easily  acceptable.
                                                                                  The attack  is still  more direct in the painting  of  Gerd
                                                                                 Richter.  a  painter of the youngest generation  showing
                                                                                 at the Sch me la Gallery in Dusseldorf. Richter came over
                                                                                 from  East  Germany in  order to paint as he pleased.  At
                                                                                 first  he  tried  the  Tachiste  mode.  then  all  the  fashion
                                                                                 here.  Dependent on  Fautrier and others as these paint­
                                                                                 ings  are.  they  show  his  sensibility.  Then  he  tried  a
                                                                                 variant of  Pop-Art.  Fed up, one day he started to copy a
                                                                                 photograph.  He  has  been  doing  so  ever  since.  The
                                                                                 copies  are  practically  exact.  complete  with  caption.
                                                                                 though  often  with  a  certain  blurring.  as  though  the
                                                                                 image were passing at high speed. What startles is the
                                                                                 transformation. The banal press-photograph is curiously
                                                                                 transformed.  A  child  looks  like  an  embryo.  Faces  are
                                                                                 satirized  more  savagely  than  ever  by  George  Grosz.  A
                                                                                 little  reproduction  of  the  Sphinx  out  of  a  lexicon  has
                                                                                 close  affinities-quite  likely  without  influence-to  the
                                                                                 early  Bacon work.  Most of  Richter's painting keeps to
                                                                                 black  and  white.  Just  recently  he  has  gone  in  for
                                                                                 colour.  Exact here. too. he gets the sickly. tinted colours
                                                                                 of the Sunday  Supplements.  the glare of travel posters.
                                                                                  The  latest trend to have taken hold in  Germany is the
                                                                                 tendency to ornament.  By that  I  mean  Hundertwasser
                                                                                 and Ouixart. figuration without the figure. a language of
                                                                                 esoteric signs.  This was prefigured years ago by  Rein­
                                                                                 hold  Koehler.  who  exhibited  at  the  municipal  Haus
                                                                                 Seel in  Siegen  in  September  of last  year.  Koehler is a
                                                                                 lone wolf who in his forties lies between the generations
                                                                                 and  has  been  ignored  by  both.  But  he  invented  the
                                                                                 technique of decal/age and used it as early as 1948. ten
                                                                                 years before the neo-dadaists in  Paris.  Apart from this.
                                                                                 his painting today is divided between the Space Fields
                                                                                 and  Thorax  Paintings.  The first  are  areas  decked with
                                                                                 hollow  points.  a  little  like  the  craters  of  the  moon.  In
                                                                                 fact.  from a distance these do have a space-expansion
                                                                                 which  almost  amounts  to  optical  illusion.  The  Thorax
                                                                                 paintings are  Koehler's  approach  to the human  figure.
                                                                                 The space experience is shallower and denser. more like
                                                                                 that surrounding sculpture. 'Acre·  (Arthur Cremer). who
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