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About Judith LindnerIs this a room you can actually set foot into? Are these real, extant places or constructed spaces born of the imagination? Judith Lindner, who paints these images, in part returns the question to the viewer. It is up to him or her to…BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Is this a room you can actually set foot into? Are these real, extant places or constructed spaces born of the imagination?
Judith Lindner, who paints these images, in part returns the question to the viewer. It is up to him or her to decide what is reality and what is fiction.
Strictly speaking, it is useless to try to concretely distinguish between the two: the painter bases her work on actual urban or rural topographies that fascinate her. She transports these motifs in a photo or sketch back to her atelier, where on the canvas she then imbues them with completely different realities and visual appearances. Through this process, which often takes many months, Lindner distances herself more and more from the original; sometimes the finished painting may no longer have anything to do with the setting that inspired the work in the first place. The originally designated perspectives and lines of sight shift and change continually on the canvas, just as the coloration is constantly transformed and revised. Though she began by using acrylic paint to procure particularly striking effects in her spatial reinterpretation, Lindner is now obliged to oil paint. Able to mix her own colors, the artist can now directly influence the consistency she wants. Since she glazes the 1-to-2-meter-large paintings in up to fifty layers – like many old masters did – the colors are never pastose but rather almost transparent or powdery looking on the canvas.
Lindner’s color palette of warm reds, pinks, and oranges is also characteristic of her work. Various blue and turquoise tones create an attractive contrast. The consistent inclusion of black is also essential to her work, which as the basic backdrop structures and weights all the pictures. The glowing colors laid atop artificial spaces like filters provoke a hard break with our everyday reality.
The suggestion of ambiguity in reference to concrete spatial references is a part of Lindner’s overarching concept. The virtuoso mix of reality and the freedom to dispense of the original object through painting opens the images to free associations and affixes their position in limbo.
The decisions to re-assemble a diverse range of images through a collage of new visual realities and to alienate them through a process of colored sections and perspectival shifts are born of one and the same artistic intention: to construct spaces and spatial illusions through painting that make you want to explore them to unearth what is really there.
Almut AndreaeVITA
1971 born in Erfurt, Germany 1998-2003 Studies at the National Academy of visual arts Karlsruhe by Prof. Ernst Caramelle
Erasmus sholarshipship in Lisbon, Portugal
Member of a masterclass by Prof. Caramelle
lives and works in Karlsruhe Exhibitions
2010 Andernorts, Galerie Uschi Kolb, Karlsruhe, Germany 2008 Silent Noise, Booth of the AdKV and the Badischen Kunstvereins on Art Karlsruhe, Germany 2006 Phänomen, Orgelfabrik, Karlsruhe, Germany 2005 From place to place, Gallery Haus Schneider, Uschi Kolb, Karlsruhe, Germany (single Exhibition) 2004 Origamis, Chapel, Göppingen, Germany MeisterschülerInnen, Kunstverein Pforzheim, Germany 2003 Galerie U7, Frankfurt, Germany 2002 Tabula Rasa, Kunsthalle Baden-Baden, Gaggenau,Germany 2000 Classe Caramelle, Gallery 1a, Frankfurt, Deutschland