Gerhard Hoehme: da war jemand

Gerhard Hoehme: da war jemand | Works 1963 – 1981

In honour of the artist's 100th birthday, curated by Kay Heymer (Kunstpalast, Düsseldorf)

Gerhard Hoehme would have been 100 years old this year. On this occasion Beck & Eggeling International Fine Art is showing 'da war jemand', the second major exhibition in the gallery of works by the artist, who died in 1989. We are very pleased that we were able to win the distinguished Hoehme connoisseur Kay Heymer as curator for this exhibition. He heads the collection of modern art at the Kunstpalast, Düsseldorf, and is responsible for the catalogue raisonné of the artist‘s paintings and objects on behalf of the Gerhard and Margarete Hoehme Foundation.



Gerhard Hoehme was an artist who constantly searched and researched. For him it was all about finding new images and new statements in an existentialist way. He used as many formal means and materials as possible and revealed their particular expressive potential. For him, the picture was not a right-angled, limited object; it extended into space as well as into the world of thought. This is especially apparent in his ‚Fensterbilder' (window paintings) group of works, which are rebelling against the limits of the frame. For Gerhard Hoehme, language also became a material of his pictures, as he got to the bottom of the meaning of terms. For him language was a cosmos that oscillated between the scriptural gesture and the poetic openness of words. In many of his pictures, words, sometimes whole sentences, but also gestural calligraphy appear. His reverence for the poet Paul Celan, who was his age, and who, in theface of...

Gerhard Hoehme would have been 100 years old this year. On this occasion Beck & Eggeling International Fine Art is showing 'da war jemand', the second major exhibition in the gallery of works by the artist, who died in 1989. We are very pleased that we were able to win the distinguished Hoehme connoisseur Kay Heymer as curator for this exhibition. He heads the collection of modern art at the Kunstpalast, Düsseldorf, and is responsible for the catalogue raisonné of the artist‘s paintings and objects on behalf of the Gerhard and Margarete Hoehme Foundation.



Gerhard Hoehme was an artist who constantly searched and researched. For him it was all about finding new images and new statements in an existentialist way. He used as many formal means and materials as possible and revealed their particular expressive potential. For him, the picture was not a right-angled, limited object; it extended into space as well as into the world of thought. This is especially apparent in his ‚Fensterbilder' (window paintings) group of works, which are rebelling against the limits of the frame. For Gerhard Hoehme, language also became a material of his pictures, as he got to the bottom of the meaning of terms. For him language was a cosmos that oscillated between the scriptural gesture and the poetic openness of words. In many of his pictures, words, sometimes whole sentences, but also gestural calligraphy appear. His reverence for the poet Paul Celan, who was his age, and who, in the face of the experience of the bureaucratically carried out mass murder in the Holocaust, rediscovered a completely new language, bordering on the verge of silence, was also characteristic of his own creative attitude. Poets and artists belonged to a generation that was robbed of its cultural existence by fascist terror and therefore had to start anew. Every material, every line, every colour was used by Gerhard Hoehme as if no one before him had tried anything similar.

The art historical classification 'Informel' only fits Gerhard Hoehme’s early oeuvre and since 1963 at the latest - the exhibition chooses 'ein bitteres Bild, ein trauriges Bild' from that year - Hoehme's work has been elevated above any classification.

Gerhard Hoehme was a consistent, unconditional individualist, and yet he stood consciously in life - as an art academy professor who struggled intensively with his colleagues K. O. Götz or Joseph Beuys for the best concepts for teaching and training, and as a political man who made a considerable contribution to coming to terms with the heavy burden of German history. This is expressed just as sublimely in paintings such as 'Deutsch-deutsches Verhältnis' as in 'Ein bitteres Bild' and many other works.

Gerhard Hoehme's working method was stringent and often vulnerable in its uncompromising nature. His obsession with PE-cords, which many of his paintings seem to extend into space and seem to express an intense need for contact and exchange with the viewer, paradoxically makes his work particularly demure and difficult for many to access. Dealing with Hoehme's work must go through a phase of slightly painful overcoming - "Cognition also has something to do with effort," our great teacher Max Imdahl used to admonish us - but what follows is by no means disillusionment, but rather an ever-growing fascination and enthusiasm for this artist and his work, which is as precise as it is sensitive and with which he has shaped the second half of the 20th century like few others. The painter's pictorial actions, which can be directly felt, keep his works fresh and let them shine today as they did 50 years ago.

Kay Heymer



A video of the exhibition with Kay Heymer in conversation with Ute Eggeling and Michael Beck will be published on our website.

Videos

3 September 2020

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