Christian Larsen
Artists:
- Atelier Van Lieshout
- Christian-Pontus Andersson
- Peter Bonde
- Max Book
- Karin Broos
- Cooper & Gorfer
- Joakim Eneroth
- Mads Gamdrup
- Charlotte Gyllenhammar
- Jeannin/Schuurmans
- Katy Kirbach
- John Körner
- Bo Christian Larsson
- Daniel Lergon
- Anna Linderstam
- Haruko Maeda
- Lucas Rahn
- Lilibeth Cuenca Rasmussen
- Viktor Rosdahl
- Vibeke Slyngstad
Exhibitions:
- 43 Katy Kirbach
- 42 Lilibeth Cuenca Rasmussen
- 41 Jeannin / Schuurmans
- 40 Lucas Rahn
- 39 Vibeke Slyngstad
- 38 Haruko Maeda
- 37 Bo Christian Larsson
- 36 Max Book
- 35 Jeannin/Schuurmans
- 34 Lilibeth Cuenca Rasmussen
- 33 Mads Gamdrup
- 32 Heikki Marila
- 31 Lucas Rahn
- 30 Christian-Pontus Andersson
- 29 Daniel Lergon
- 28 Peter Bonde
- 27 Karin Broos
- 26 Joakim Eneroth
- 25 Viktor Rosdahl
- 24 Ann-Sofi Sidén
- 23 Cooper & Gorfer
- 22 Katy Kirbach
- 21 Anna Linderstam
- 20 Joakim Eneroth
- 19 Vibeke Slyngstad
- 18 Christine Ödlund
- 17 John Körner
- 16 Charlotte Gyllenhammar
- 15 Mads Gamdrup
- 14 Max Book
- 13 Karin Broos
- 12 Viktor Rosdahl
- 11 State of Mind
- 10 Anders Widoff
- 09 Ann-Sofi Sidén
- 08 Roger Ballen
- 07 Daniel Lergon
- 06 Hello Gallery Owner!
- 04 Atelier Van Lieshout
- 03 Frida Tebus
- 02 Christian–Pontus Andersson
- 01 Tomas Saraceno
Exhibition 29:
About:
The phenomenal duality of light and matter – and the wave and particle character they both appear to have – is the focal point of this exhibition of paintings and wall-drawings by Daniel Lergon. The works trace an energetic memory sedimented in the gallery walls during cold fire, an exhibition that took place here in 2008.
The metal wall drawings emphasise the materiality of the space they form a part of and ‘matter’ itself as a concept. The white paintings could be considered to stand in opposition to these weighty figures. They emit volumes of light that we have to physically move in from side to side in order to see, closer to and further from the canvas, in rhythmic accordance with our optical experience and the pace of our eyes moving over the canvas.
Daniel Lergon’s white paintings consist of transparent lacquer on a retro-reflective fabric. This contrasts the traditional idea of painting as the application of pigments to a surface and instead lets the surface itself produce the colour, modulated by a transparent medium. The white paintings create a scattering of light in all directions, a thickness in the atmosphere of the immediate surroundings of the painting. The whiteness is dense and pillowy, flattening and bulging, appearing and disappearing with the movement of the beholder. What are otherwise subtle, ephemeral figures are brought into focus by the near vacuous surfaces that surround them.
Whiteness factors crucially in our existence: in the strong rays of daylight, in the essential first nourishing drops of milk, in the white flag offering peace, in socially constructed racial identities, in a sheet of white paper that carries an artist’s deliberations, in the sterile environments of a hospital or laboratory, but also in materials valued for their aesthetical assets such as pearl or marble as well as in the ‘purity’ and concomitant high status of the white gallery space, the white cube. And yet, white is considered a non-colour. Even though we know that white light is the sum of all colours in the spectrum, a white plain or surface is considered neutral and deemed unfinished or naked.
/Emma Gradin
Daniel Lergon, born 1978 in Bonn, lives in Berlin.
Selected exhibitions:
Albedo, 2007, Galerie Andreas Huber, Vienna; cold fire, 2008, Aerea – Christian Larsen, Stockholm; nimbi, 2008, Galerie Christian Lethert, Cologne; States of Matter, 2008, Andersen’s Contemporary Berlin; Metall, 2009, Galerie Christian Lethert, Cologne; Elements, 2010, Almine Rech Gallery, Brussels; Iapetus, 2010, Kunstverein Mönchengladbach; Whiteout, 2011, Almine Rech Gallery, Paris; 3000K, 2011, Galerie Andreas Huber, Vienna

