Four further Transluzide in the exhibition at Kunstmuseum
Ahlen, titled Fassaden I-V (2013), are a consistent continuation
of Margareta Hesse’s characteristic way of working
on the one hand,
whilst on the other they unlock completely new and enigmatic
perspectives to the series at surprisingly new visual levels.
Whilst the selection of visual materials and her artistic
techniques, and
therefore the strict conceptual approach in Margareta Hesse’s
oeuvre, remains more or less unchanged in these works, her
most recent works in the ongoing series Transluzide have
not only increased
in terms of dimensions (160 x 250 x 10 cm each), but also
combine her primary interest of mixing colour and its effects
as well as the depiction of non-figurative elements, with
photographic
elements, which initially confound the viewer in their move
towards pure figuration and reproduction. However, the manner
in which – and what – Margareta Hesse incorporates
as
recognisable figuration into this new Transluzide work series,
does not remain confusing or contradictory for long on closer
examination. The clear geometry of the compositional structure
of
the conceptual works derives from Margareta Hesse’s
photographs of buildings in her hometown Berlin, showing
the architectural grids of façades which in their
addition nevertheless remain formally
and aesthetically coherent. The modular and gridded views
of windows and balconies were transferred, as fragments
in the form of black and white negatives on transparent
sheets, to the
rear polyester panel, which acts as the first semantic and
“foundational” visual layer of the work.
Fassaden I und II with their balcony imagery are compellingly
combined with grid patterns of irregular circular forms
created with a light silicon paste, whilst the historical
façade elements of Fassaden III und IV with their
cell and stripe structure are formed using an organic resinous
shellac. What in Fassaden I und II appear, when seen frontally
by the viewer, as flat circular forms, seem more like organic
cocoons when viewed from the side which, whether open or
closed, are up to 10 cm high and which display individual
form as well as slightly differing alignments. It is therefore
possible to either read these formal structures in a purely
if slightly irregular geometrical sense or, focussing on
their wealth of semantic associations, perceive the emotional
expressivity of the colour as a subtle element of tension
in the pictures, which address such aspects as individual
feelings of security, nest-like shelters, quiet retreats
and homeliness and privacy within a relatively anonymous,
monotonous and desolate modern urban architecture. The emotional
expressivity of the dominant red lacquer again combines
the structurally inherent elements of Fassaden I bis IV
into a multilayered overall effect, which may be perceived
as a multilayered play of light and shadow, which in Margareta
Hesse’s work always results in a complex interplay
of colour and form. Likewise in this specific case the photographic
element which has been used, is self-referentially reduced
to its original structural interplay of light and shadow
and subsequently deconstructed. The foregrounding of the
semantic potential of photography as a mirror of reality
is in a double respect equivocally displaced to the background
.
section of the text LIGHTZONES, from Colour to Light, from
the Material to the Immaterial, from the Rational to the
Emotional, by Pamela Scorzin in “LIGHTZONES”,
published by Kunstmuseum Ahlen 2013