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Piot Brehmer "Landungen und Maedchen"    May 31 - Jul 5, 2008

Dorado
Piot Brehmer
Dorado, 2008
 
Amenti
Piot Brehmer
Amenti, 2008
 
Sulfur
Piot Brehmer
Sulfur, 2008
 
#202
Piot Brehmer
#202
 
#199
Piot Brehmer
#199, 2007
 
Aleister Crowley Contemplates Freuds Essay on Narcissism, or the Mirror-stage of the Great Beast
Robert Yarber
Aleister Crowley Contemplates Freuds Essay on Narcissism, or the Mirror-stage of the Great Beast, 1993
 
View :    Past Exhibitions      
 
also featuring Robert Yarber's singular painting,
"Aleister Crowley Contemplates Freud’s Essay on Narcissism, or the Mirror-stage of the Great Beast"

Saturday, May 31st, 5 - 7 pm
Opening reception for Piot Brehmer

On May 31, 2008, German artist Piot Brehmer debuts a series of new work, “Landungen und Maedchen” at Samuel Freeman, formerly the Patricia Faure Gallery. Brehmer’s oil on canvas “Maedchen” pieces are realistic portraits of young women, and are rather straightforward on the surface. Something, however, is amiss. These paintings, abstracted from found photographs, lack a certain specificity to them; his models have a certain subtle vagueness of expression and gaze. The effect is both unsettling and intriguing. In these diminutive portraits, Brehmer’s scale and technique remove the barriers of personal space, inviting viewers to explore the psychological narrative suspended before them. Brehmer’s brushstrokes create a sort of third generation detachment, blurring age and sexuality, eliminating identity and, in their place, painting a new narrative by removing any semblance of the original image’s context.

Brehemer’s method isn’t just reserved for women. In his “Landungen” series, the artist inverts his intimate scale into a massive abstraction of an already abstracted space. Landing strips are specifically the space in between things. They represent the arrival and departure points for travel and adventure, dismay and dread, longing and hope. Standing in front of Brehmer’s “Landungen” paintings, the viewer is caught in the holding pattern, awaiting his or her own arrival, suspended mid-flight, making a literal translation of the ambiguity and detachment of the Maedchen paintings. Lights are blurred, doubled and tripled, lines are skewed, and explicit three-dimensional geographies are reduced to a two-dimensional darkness dotted by singular, colored points. As in his depiction of human subjects, context is again lost and in its place is a surface of tension. With Brehmer’s “Landungen” works, the viewer is thrust into the seats of a plane spinning ever closer toward an indiscernible horizon.

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