Eigenheim, everything but the kitchen sink.

Eigenheim, everything but the kitchen sink.

Kunstverein Göttingen

Ruth Bass in the kitchen of the Bass House (Case Study House No. 20), 1958. Conrad Buff, Calvin Straub, Donald Hensman, architects. Julius Shulman, photographer. Altadena, California, 1958
Image: from the print diptych Kitchen I&II, 2004 by Terence Gower

April 20, 2006

Eigenheim, everything but the kitchen sink
April 23.rd – June 04.th 2006

Opening: Sat. April 22nd 2006, 6 p.m.<br>

Exhibition Venue:
Kunstverein Goettingen
Altes Rathaus, Markt 9, D-37073 Goettingen, Germany
Hours: Tues- Sun 11-17

Kunstverein Goettingen
Gotmarstrasse 1
D-37073 Goettingen 
www.kunstvereingoettingen.de

Dan Attoe (USA), Carol Bove (USA), FOS (DK), Terence Gower (CDN), Ellen Harvey (GB), Elisabeth Hautmann (D), Maria Hedlund (SE), Franz Hoefner / Harry Sachs (D), Katie Holten (IRL), Sofia Hulten (SE), Rupprecht Matthies (D), Peter Piller (D), Michael Sailstorfer (D), Corinna Schnitt (D), Felix Schramm (D), Stefan Saffer (D) / Richard Woods (GB), Mungo Thomson (USA)
Curators: Laurie De Chiara and Bernd Milla

Eigenheim is German for a home of ones own, and for all that we put into making our home into a personalized space. The nests we make for ourselves are havens designed to address a range of very personal needs and wishes. Money, work and time are invested; worry, care and resourcefulness are spent. The need to create a secure and comfortable place to carry out our private lives may be universal, but the diversity apparent in actual dwellings suggests there may be endless possibilities.

The work of nineteen artists will inhabit the space at the Kunstverein Goettingen from April 23rd through June 6th 2006 for the exhibition Eigenheim, everything but the kitchen sink curated by Laurie DeChiara and Bernd Milla. The approach by which each of the artists comes to the concept of Eigenheim can be viewed as coming from one of five distinct camps and sometimes overlap.

Several artists included have produced work that dwells specifically on the materials and construction techniques used in building homes. Felix Schramms sculptures incorporate building materials whose raw edges suggest they might have been ripped directly from the walls of a construction site. Franz Hoefner / Harry Sachs are building a site-specific eigenheim installation inside the historic city hall which will house the exhibition, using wallpaper and recycled furniture as their primary material. Michael Sailstorfer will present a contemplative slide installation that documents the transformation of a small wooden house as it slowly burns down to the ground.

The collaborative installation of a construction site by Richard Woods and Stefan Saffer, R.I.P has echoes of the buried secrets in the walls, as well as a video by bSofia Hulten, which deals with the psychological obsessions and pitfalls that can develop living in our homes.

Another artistic focus is the realm of design and the use of decorative elements and functional objects in homemaking. Ellen Harveys painting of wallpaper, mounted on the wallpaper it represents belongs in this category. Katie Holtens meditative drawings of vegetation on bed sheets, paper, and in an Eigenheim manual also fit in here, as do FOS sound coconut-hull lamps and Maria Hedlunds photographs of chairs lined up perfectly on a wooden floor.

The works that deal with arrangements, memorabilia and collections represent a more intimate view. Carol Boves clusters of books on shelves bring our attention to the aspect of personality reflected in the way a resident arranges and rearranges objects in the home. Mungo Thomsons sound installation of the artist making music on wine glasses call forth a narrative about time spent alone within ones space. The taxidermied German Shepard dog that Elisabeth Hautmann presents splayed out on the floor of the space subverts our normal expectations for this loyal and reliable companion and guard. As a victim, he lays like a trophy before the fireplace, and simultaneously calls upon associations with antlers and fur used as decoration and with the role the German Shepard dog plays as a symbol for a proper German home life.

The final set of artworks in Eigenheim represent and document the concept of a personal home by stepping a bit further away. Literally, Peter Pillers photographs and Dan Attoes painting leave us at a distance; images of homes from afar call upon their fragility and insularity in the context of a larger picture. A video work by Corinna Schnitt comments on the banality of a beautiful, idyllic middle-class existence. Rupprecht Matthiess text based works will find form for Eigenheim as a pin to be handed out to the public with the word endlich (finally). Further word-sculptures will appear in public spaces in Goettingen. Terence Gowers photos are set within model homes of the postwar-era in California, but the images of women working in their perfect home still present a distanced viewpoint that calls upon the viewer to consider just what it means to settle in somewhere.

For further information contact: Bernd Milla, milla@kunstvereingoettingen.de
Press contact: Anja Marack, presse@kunstvereingoettingen.de
fon/fax 49 (0) 551 / 44899

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April 20, 2006

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