Via Lewandowsky

Last updated

Volker Via Lewandowsky (born 7 March 1963, in Dresden) is a German artist who works with installation, sculpture, object art, photography, performance, painting and drawing.

Contents

Poem for an Artist[ citation needed ]

Born in Dresden in 1963
lost an eye at the age of three
because of arts. Since then, a devotee.
Ergo: unshorn no one will ever be.

Durs Grünbein, 1997

Life

Via Lewandowsky studied at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts from 1982 until 1987. Starting in 1985, he organised subversive performances together with the avant-garde group Autoperforationsartisten that undermined the Communist art authorities of Eastern Germany (GDR). In 1989, shortly before the fall of the Berlin Wall, he left the GDR and subsequently moved to West Berlin. Since then, he has travelled extensively and has lived for extended periods in New York, Rome, Peking and Canada. He now resides in Berlin.

Work

Via Lewandowsky works in diverse artistic media. He is most familiar for his sculptural-installation works and exhibition scenographies with architectonic influences such as Gehirn und Denken: Kosmos im Kopf [Brain and Thinking: Cosmos in Mind: 2000] displayed at the German Hygiene Museum in Dresden. By the 1990s his work had already begun to incorporate elements of Sound Art; this has since become an important and integral part of much of his performance work.

Content, not form, is the unifying theme in Via Lewandowsky's body of work. Dominant recurring themes include: misunderstanding as failure of communication and the deformation and deconstruction of meaning. Another hallmark of Via's work is that ideas are represented as process rather than completion. The artist is neither looking for something conclusive, a definitive ending, nor complete destruction but rather for the constructive moment within a process of destruction. This identification of the in-between moment is highlighted by the work's inherently satirical content that does not try to elicit pathos from its audience. Via's work does not confer objects with disrespect but rather admiration and amazement.

His working method and the effectiveness of its artistic results are often characterized by opposites. Elements that are controlled, staged and constantly emerging also have spontaneous, unexpected, and thus lively qualities. Humoristic, seemingly lighthearted works viewed a second time contain gruesome, brutal moments that can turn the comedic into the disturbing.

His preference for tragicomedy, absurdity and paradox as well as the Sisyphean drama of continuous repetition and futility of action link Via Lewandowsky's art with Dadaism, Surrealism and Fluxus. The ironic breaks with everyday life, the intrusion of the strange into the familiar, often domestic realm take place in his work by using the detritus of the German bourgeoisie: cuckoo clocks, DIY garden sheds, parakeets or bureaucracy. His interest in a nation's construction of identity exposes a political dimension in his work.

Works in Public Space

Via Lewandowsky's sculpture From Behind (Doggy Style), 2006, in the permanent collection of the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, St. Louis, Missouri Von hinten (Doggy Style).jpg
Via Lewandowsky's sculpture From Behind (Doggy Style), 2006, in the permanent collection of the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, St. Louis, Missouri
The democracy bell (2010) Demokratieglocke.jpg
The democracy bell (2010)

Via's installations in public spaces confirm this, as do his performances, which create an awareness of the structures of historiography. In 2009 his contribution to the 20th anniversary of the Monday demonstrations in East Germany (specifically Leipzig) took the form of a confetti parade. Cannon were fired at the participants with the fusillades consisting of confetti made from miniature business cards bearing the code names and professions of thousands of the Stasi's domestic spies. Information for the business cards was acquired from documentation at the Federal Commissioner for the Stasi Records (or Birthler office) in Leipzig.

On 9 October 2009, in Leipzig was unveiled the public art object "Democracy bell" at the Augustusplatz.

Via Lewandowsky's public works of art cannot be reduced to any obvious political element. Von hinten (Doggy Style) [From Behind (Doggy Style): 2006], in the collection of the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum in St. Louis, Missouri, plays with absurdity and puzzle of form and content. As with many of his works, the title points at the work's inherent double entendre and hints at bigotry, thereby increasing its effect on the viewer.

A work installed at a public site central to Germany history in Berlin is Roter Teppich [Red Carpet: 2003]. Laid out in the entrance hall of the Bendlerblock, this oversized carpet, when viewed from above, shows a war-torn Berlin and ironically refers to the military term carpet bombing. The irony is heightened by the choice of location, as the Bendler Block is currently the home of the German Federal Ministry of Defence. Roter Teppich's overlapping of various layers of comprehension and the conscious aim of misguiding his audience by constructing unclear narrative threads are characteristic qualities of Via Lewandowsky's work.

Fellowships and Awards (selection)

1991: New York Fellowship of the Berlin Senate Administration at P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center (today: MoMA PS 1)

1994: Fellowship at Banff Centre for the Arts, Canada

1995: Art Award, Leipziger Volkszeitung

1997: Grant, Stiftung Kunstfonds Bonn

1998: Botho Graef Award of the City of Jena

2005: Working Grant, Beijing Case, Peking

2008: Fellowship Villa Aurora, Los Angeles

2011: Fellowship Villa Massimo, Rome

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">East Germany</span> Country in Central Europe (1949–1990)

East Germany, officially the German Democratic Republic, was a country that existed from its creation on 7 October 1949 until its dissolution on 3 October 1990. From 1949 to 1989 the country was a part of the Eastern Bloc in the Cold War. Commonly described as a communist state, it described itself as a socialist "workers' and peasants' state". Its territory was administered and occupied by Soviet forces following the end of World War II—the Soviet occupation zone of the Potsdam Agreement, bounded on the east by the Oder–Neisse line. The Soviet zone surrounded West Berlin but did not include it and West Berlin remained outside the jurisdiction of the GDR. Most scholars and academics describe the GDR as a totalitarian dictatorship.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stasi</span> East German secret police

The Ministry for State Security, commonly known as the Stasi, was the state security service of East Germany from 1950 to 1990.

As with many Soviet-allied countries prior to the fall of the Berlin Wall, the government of the former German Democratic Republic applied censorship during its existence from 1949 to 1990. The censorship was practised through a hierarchical but unofficial censorship apparatus, ultimately controlled by the ruling party (SED). Through censorship, the socialist point of view on society was ensured in all forms of literature, arts, culture and public communication. Due to the lack of an official censorship apparatus, censorship was applied locally in a highly structured and institutionalized manner under the control of the SED.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">A. R. Penck</span> German painter

Ralf Winkler, alias A. R. Penck, who also used the pseudonyms Mike Hammer, T. M., Mickey Spilane, Theodor Marx, "a. Y." or just "Y" was a German painter, printmaker, sculptor, and jazz drummer. A neo-expressionist, he became known for his visual style, reminiscent of the influence of primitive art.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Volker Braun</span> German writer (born 1939)

Volker Braun is a German writer. His works include Provokation für mich – a collection of poems written between 1959 and 1964 and published in 1965, a play, Die Kipper, and Das ungezwungene Leben Kasts (1972).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">SV Dynamo</span>

The Sportvereinigung Dynamo was the sport association of the security agencies of former East Germany. The association was founded on 27 March 1953 and was headquartered in Hohenschönhausen in East Berlin. From the date of its inception, the permanent president of SV Dynamo was the Minister of State Security Erich Mielke. The Minister of State Security served as First chairman of the association, while the Minister of the Interior served as the Second chairman of the association. The financial and material resources of the SV Dynamo were almost exclusively provided by the Ministry of State Security. Erich Mielke was dismissed as First chairman in December 1989. His position was not replaced. SV Dynamo was dissolved in 1990.

Stefan Roloff is a German-American painter, video artist, filmmaker, and pioneer of digital video and photography, living and working in New York and Berlin. Roloff's documentary, The Red Orchestra, a portrait of his late father, Helmut Roloff, an anti-Nazi resistance fighter, was nominated for Best Foreign Film 2005 by the US Women Critics Circle.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hermann Glöckner</span> German artist (1889–1987)

Hermann Glöckner was a German painter and sculptor. He was an important representative of constructivism.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Johannes Heisig</span> German painter

Johannes Heisig is a German painter and graphic artist. His work combines the tradition of German socialist realism with a subjective expressionism. He portrayed several famous German politicians such as Willy Brandt, Johannes Rau and former Finance Minister Peer Steinbrück. The artist is represented by galerie son, Berlin.

Max Uhlig is a German painter. He won the Hans Theo Richter-Preis of the Sächsische Akademie der Künste in 1998.

Yana Milev is a German cultural theorist, sociologist, ethnographer, and curator.

Ulrike Theusner( born 1982 in Frankfurt, Germany) is a German artist working primarily in drawing and printmaking. She studied at École Nationale Supérieure d'Arts à la Villa Arson in Nice, France and graduated in 2008 from Bauhaus University in Weimar, Germany. Amongst others, her work was exhibited in groupshows at Kunsthalle Darmstadt, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Nice, Neues Museum Weimar and several solo shows in New York, Berlin, Frankfurt, Toulouse, Paris and Shanghai. She lives and works between Weimar and Berlin.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Erika Stürmer-Alex</span> German artist (born 1938)

Erika Stürmer-Alex is a German artist whose works include wall paintings, panel paintings, printed graphics, collage sculptures, polyester sculptures and installations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Christian W. Staudinger</span> German artist (born 1952)

Christian W. Staudinger is a German artist who became involved in art after his escape from the GDR and the trial of a civil life. He is dedicated to the visual arts, performance and conceptual art, poetry and political arts, is a video artist and arranges installation art.

Katrin Hattenhauer is a German painter and civil rights activist. In the late 1980s she was a member of the GDR-opposition movement. On 4 September 1989 she demonstrated "For an Open Country with Free People", marking the beginning of the Monday demonstrations in Leipzig. Her paintings and social sculptures have been exhibited in Europe.

Siegmar Faust is a German writer and human rights activist. He was a political prisoner in the GDR, and from 1996 to 1999, he was the State Commissioner for Stasi documents in Saxony.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Evelyn Richter</span> German photographer (1930–2021)

Evelyn Richter was a German art photographer known primarily for social documentary photography work in East Germany. She is notable for her black & white photography in which she documented working-class life, and which often showed influences of Dadaism and futurism. Her photography is focused on people in everyday life, including children, workers, artists and musicians.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cornelia Schleime</span>

Cornelia Schleime is a German painter, performer, filmmaker and author. Born in East Berlin under the GDR, she studied painting and graphic arts at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts before becoming a member of the underground art scene.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Else Gabriel</span> German artist

Else Gabriel is a German performance artist and educator.

Wolfgang Hütt was a German art historian.