Josephine Meckseper

Josephine Meckseper
Born 1964
Lilienthal, Germany
Nationality German
Education California Institute of the Arts, Berlin University of the Arts
Known for Installation, Sculpture, Painting, Photography, Film

Josephine Meckseper is a German-born artist based in New York City. Her large-scale installations and films have been exhibited in various international biennials and museum shows worldwide.

Life and education

Josephine Meckseper grew up in Worpswede, Germany, a utopian artist colony founded at the beginning of the 20th century. Paula Modersohn-Becker (1876–1907) and the writer and poet Rainer Maria Rilke (1875–1926), both lived in Worpswede for parts of their life, as did Meckseper’s maternal great-grand-uncle, Heinrich Vogeler (1872–1942). Vogeler was a diverse political artist and architect whose work is situated within the Jugendstil movement, a German offspring of Art Nouveau. Meckseper’s father is the widely known and celebrated German artist Friedrich Meckseper (born 1936).[1]

Josephine Meckseper studied at Berlin University of the Arts in Germany from 1986–1990, and completed her MFA at the California Institute of the Arts in 1992,[2] where she was influenced by artists Michael Asher and Charles Gaines, filmmaker Thom Andersen and literary critic and cultural theorist Sylvère Lotringer.[3]

Work

Meckseper’s time at CalArts coincided with the Gulf War and the Rodney King riots; During this politically-charged period her work reflected upon the actions of the Situationist International and the Angry Brigade.[4]

In 1994, Meckseper founded FAT Magazine, a conceptual magazine project distributed at regular newsstands and in supermarkets, but also exhibited in galleries and museums in the form of wallpaper. It was inspired by political theorist and radical publisher Jean-Paul Marat’s newspaper, published during the French Revolution called L'Ami du peuple and the avant-garde tradition of breaking down barriers between art and life. Since 1994, Meckseper has published four issues: Good and Evil (1994); Surrender (1995/1996); on Fire (1997); and Overflow (1999).[5]

Meckseper’s installations, sculptures, photographs, and videos use commercial forms of presentation such as vitrines, window displays, and magazines to demonstrate inextricable influences of consumer culture on society and cultural production. Meckseper melds the aesthetics of modernism with the formal language of commercial display, combining them with images and artifacts of historical and political events.[6] Often contained within Meckseper’s signature displays are paintings that nod to 20th century European modernist art, such as Russian constructivism,[7] as well as photographs and video taken by Meckseper at present-day protests.

Manhattan Oil Project

In 2012, Meckseper presented the public project Manhattan Oil Project, installing two monumental kinetic sculptures modeled after mid-20th century oil pumps on the corner of 46th Street and 8th Avenue in New York City.[8] These 25 feet tall sculptures were inspired by oil pumps that the artist discovered in Electra, a boarded-up town once famous for being the pump jack capital of Texas. Each sculpture was fully motorized to simulate the motions of a working oil pump. Placed in a vacant lot next to Times Square, the pump jacks recalled the ruins of ghost towns, forgotten monuments of America's decaying industrial past.

Selected Exhibitions[9]

Public collections

Filmography

Publications[10]

Monographs and Exhibition Catalogues

Books

References

  1. Enwezor, Okwui (2007). Josephine Meckseper. Hatje Cantz.
  2. "Josephine Meckseper at Kunstmuseum Stuttgart - Artipedia - Arts News". Archived from the original on 2007-08-14.
  3. Szewczyk, Monika, “Josephine Meckseper: American Still Life,” Flash Art, No. 272, May/June 2010, pp. 98-100.
  4. Lookofsky, Sarah, “Josephine Meckseper – The Final Shop,” dismagazine.com
  5. FAT magazine website. Retrieved August 8, 2016.
  6. "Andrea Rosen Gallery". Andrea Rosen Gallery.
  7. Lotringer, Sylvère (2006). The Josephine Meckseper Catalogue No. 2. New York: Sternberg Press.
  8. "Art Production Fund".
  9. "Andrea Rosen Gallery" (PDF).
  10. "Andrea Rosen Gallery".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.