As of Nov 13, 2024

Albert Oehlen

Lot 324
mit André Butzer (1973 Stuttgart) und Schorsch Kamerun (d. i. Thomas Sehl, 1963 Timmendorfer Strand). Walker, 1999
Oil on canvas

47.2 x 59.1 in (120.0 x 150.0 cm)

Lot 324
mit André Butzer (1973 Stuttgart) und Schorsch Kamerun (d. i. Thomas Sehl, 1963 Timmendorfer Strand). Walker, 1999
Oil on canvas
47.2 x 59.1 in (120.0 x 150.0 cm)

Estimate:
€ 80,000 - 120,000
Auction: 16 days

Ketterer Kunst GmbH & Co KG

City: Munich
Auction: Dec 07, 2024
Auction number: 561
Auction name: Contemporary Day Sale

Lot Details
Oil on canvas. Signed, dated and titled by all three artists on the reverse of the canvas. 120 x 150 cm.
[AR].

• Typical joint work for Albert Oehlen, in this case with André Butzer and Schorsch Kamerun.
• Comparable collaborations with artist friends are a special feature of Albert Oehlen's work.
• He is considered one of the protagonists of German New Expressionism.
• First exhibited on the occasion of the “Steirischer Herbst” at Galerie Bleich-Rossi in Graz the year it was made.
New Stream. Albert Oehlen, André Butzer, George Kamerun, Galerie Bleich Rossi, Graz, September 25 - October 24, 1999
Galerie Bleich-Rossi, Graz. Private collection, Steiermark. Private collection, Hesse
The joint work, “Walker” by Albert Oehlen, André Butzer, and Schorsch Kamerun, was first shown in the context of the “Steirischer Herbst” art festival at Galerie Bleich-Rossi in 1999. All three artists participated several times in this Austrian contemporary art festival, which is still considered a pioneering event today. It took place for the first time in the seminal year of 1968 and has placed focus on interdisciplinary exchange ever since. In the present large work by the three German artists, a bright green, sphinx-like creature leaps through the picture, its New Wave head sporting a wild mane. Epaulettes suggest a cool uniform jacket. A road leads into the distance behind it, and a stage diva reminiscent of the YMCA policeman is kneeling. This work raises questions concerning otherness. This topic is very much in line with the festival of that time and the associated “question of how to deal with the other and the appropriation and exclusion of the minoritarian, the emergence of hybrid identities and the disturbances of the body, the reflection on the work of art as a product of the division of and the conditions of its production,” as the former artistic director Christine Frisinghelli put it (https://archiv.steirischerherbst.at/de/editions/1999, accessed October 18, 2024). Oehlen, Butzer, and Kamerun all grew up during the punk era and new wave; the “Neue Wilden” (New Wild Ones) coincided with the renewal of figurative art in the Federal Republic of Germany. Here, the three artists reflect on a past that they have personally experienced. While Butzer and Oehlen are primarily known as visual artists, Schorsch Kamerun is best known as the singer of the punk band “Die goldenen Zitronen” and today also works as a director at major theaters such as the Zurich Schauspielhaus and the Munich Kammerspiele. Albert Oehlen is not only considered one of the leading representatives of “post-non-representational painting” but also one of those European artists who, as early as in the early 1980s, were willing to paint pictures that are still considered the basis for everything regarded “worthwhile seeing” in the early 21st century. [EH/AR]
Good overall impression. With small losses and adhesions, especially in left part. Cavas slightly rubbed in upper left corner. The condition report was compiled in daylight with the help of an ultraviolet light and to the best of knowledge.
Lot Details
Oil on canvas. Signed, dated and titled by all three artists on the reverse of the canvas. 120 x 150 cm.
[AR].

• Typical joint work for Albert Oehlen, in this case with André Butzer and Schorsch Kamerun.
• Comparable collaborations with artist friends are a special feature of Albert Oehlen's work.
• He is considered one of the protagonists of German New Expressionism.
• First exhibited on the occasion of the “Steirischer Herbst” at Galerie Bleich-Rossi in Graz the year it was made.
New Stream. Albert Oehlen, André Butzer, George Kamerun, Galerie Bleich Rossi, Graz, September 25 - October 24, 1999
Galerie Bleich-Rossi, Graz. Private collection, Steiermark. Private collection, Hesse
The joint work, “Walker” by Albert Oehlen, André Butzer, and Schorsch Kamerun, was first shown in the context of the “Steirischer Herbst” art festival at Galerie Bleich-Rossi in 1999. All three artists participated several times in this Austrian contemporary art festival, which is still considered a pioneering event today. It took place for the first time in the seminal year of 1968 and has placed focus on interdisciplinary exchange ever since. In the present large work by the three German artists, a bright green, sphinx-like creature leaps through the picture, its New Wave head sporting a wild mane. Epaulettes suggest a cool uniform jacket. A road leads into the distance behind it, and a stage diva reminiscent of the YMCA policeman is kneeling. This work raises questions concerning otherness. This topic is very much in line with the festival of that time and the associated “question of how to deal with the other and the appropriation and exclusion of the minoritarian, the emergence of hybrid identities and the disturbances of the body, the reflection on the work of art as a product of the division of and the conditions of its production,” as the former artistic director Christine Frisinghelli put it (https://archiv.steirischerherbst.at/de/editions/1999, accessed October 18, 2024). Oehlen, Butzer, and Kamerun all grew up during the punk era and new wave; the “Neue Wilden” (New Wild Ones) coincided with the renewal of figurative art in the Federal Republic of Germany. Here, the three artists reflect on a past that they have personally experienced. While Butzer and Oehlen are primarily known as visual artists, Schorsch Kamerun is best known as the singer of the punk band “Die goldenen Zitronen” and today also works as a director at major theaters such as the Zurich Schauspielhaus and the Munich Kammerspiele. Albert Oehlen is not only considered one of the leading representatives of “post-non-representational painting” but also one of those European artists who, as early as in the early 1980s, were willing to paint pictures that are still considered the basis for everything regarded “worthwhile seeing” in the early 21st century. [EH/AR]
Good overall impression. With small losses and adhesions, especially in left part. Cavas slightly rubbed in upper left corner. The condition report was compiled in daylight with the help of an ultraviolet light and to the best of knowledge.

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