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21.10.2024 - 04.07.2025

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  • Thomas Arnolds
  • Brandy Brandstätter
  • Christopher Bucklow
  • Natalie Czech
  • Ines Doujak
  • Jan Paul Evers
  • Michela Ghisetti
  • Antonio Girbés
  • Dorothee Golz
  • Vivian Greven
  • Bernadette Huber
  • Eva Jospin
  • Robert Kunec
  • Alina Kunitsyna
  • Hans Kupelwieser
  • Margaret Lansink
  • Tina Lechner
  • Mevlana Lipp
  • Constantin Luser
  • Joel Meyerowitz
  • Sissa Micheli
  • Jürgen Münzer
  • Loredana Nemes
  • Hans Op de Beeck
  • Fabian Ramirez
  • Julia Scher
  • Stefanie Seufert
  • Eva Schlegel
  • Paul Spendier
  • Wolfgang Walkensteiner
  • Clemens Wolf
© Clemens Wolf © Clemens Wolf Clemens Wolf, Remix 11, 2022
, Sandblasted mirror, 101 x 101 cm
Kollitsch Collection

Fences and grids are an important frame of reference in the oeuvre of Clemens Wolf, who engages with urban spaces, ruins and barriers in his paintings, sculptures, and installations. In his mind, fences are not just a visible boundary, but also raise the question of what lies beyond; of the life on this or the other side of the fence, of freedom and restriction, of the hidden, invisible barriers of our inner life. The artist’s interest in what can’t be seen, in hidden places, is also reflected in his latest works using sandblasted mirrors. The back of the mirror – which can’t be seen – becomes the support medium for a grid-like mesh. Using a sandblaster, he creates a characteristic lattice structure of different shapes, depths, and colours.

— Magdalena Koschat

© Clemens Wolf © Clemens Wolf Clemens Wolf, Parachute Sculpture 6 (black), 2016
, Epoxy resin on round canopy parachute, approx. 500 x 90 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Steinek, Vienna

In his “Parachute Works”, Clemens Wolf uses discarded parachutes as a starting point for sculptures, paintings, objects and drawings. Drapes and folds – traditional subjects in painting – are a central theme and representative of transience and finiteness, a core motif in Clemens Wolf’s work. The parachutes are treated with dyed epoxy resin, capturing the former rescue device in an irretrievable moment and freezing its airy membrane in time. The parachute, with its shiny surface that appears to be almost liquid, poses a challenge for the viewer and gives rise to the impulse – fully intended by the artist – to explore the work not just visually, but also physically, by touching it.

— Magdalena Koschat

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