Cover Installation view, Isa Genzken, Untitled, 2015 © Isa Genzken / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn

The everyday materials used by German artist Isa Genzken may seem disparate, but her complex work reveals the connections beneath the surface.

In her forty years as an artist, Isa Genzken has created sculptures, collages, paintings, drawings, films, and photographs. And the materials she uses are no less diverse: you are as likely to see a food wrapper and a cardboard box in her creations as you are paint and canvas.

Now, a new exhibition at David Zwirner, presenting key works from the last ten years of Genzken’s career, reveals to visitors not only the variety of her work, but also the questions and concerns that motivate her.

Above A look inside the work of Isa Genzken on display at David Zwirner (Videography: Ivan Chan)

Immediately capturing the eye are a selection of Genzken’s recent “tower” and “column” structures. Made from fibreboard adorned with mirror foil, spray paint, and even photographs of the artist herself, the structures remind us that the vast skyscrapers surrounding us rest on political and social foundations - but are vulnerable and fragile too.

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Photo 1 of 3 Installation view, Isa Genzken, Untitled, 2015
Photo 2 of 3 Isa Genzken, Untitled, 2015, © Isa Genzken / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn
Photo 3 of 3 Isa Genzken, Untitled, 2015, © Isa Genzken / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn

Since 2004, Genzken has been represented by David Zwirner, and to walk among her “tower” and “column” structures and other works in the gallery’s Hong Kong space is to encounter her work in an ideal setting.

Spread across two floors of H Queen’s, David Zwirner’s beautifully-designed spaces allow the variety and creativity of Genzken’s work to shine through.

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H Queen's at 80 Queen's Road Central
Above H Queen's at 80 Queen's Road Central

Designed by renowned architect and artist William Lim, H Queen’s offers non-traditional spaces, multifunctional layouts and optimum floor-to-ceiling heights to a number of prestigious international art galleries. 

The award-winning 24-storey development at 80 Queen’s Road Central also houses two-Michelin-starred restaurants and famous retail and lifestyle brands - all just footsteps away from the best of Hong Kong’s shopping and and entertainment.

The work arising from Genzken’s fascination with architecture and urban skylines is in part what has cemented her reputation as one of the most significant artists of the German postwar era. 

But her more recent work, using an altogether different kind of structure, is equally arresting. A series of elaborately adorned mannequins, each of them with a variety of clothes, props and accessories, stands in silent commune in another of David Zwirner’s spaces.

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Photo 1 of 3 Isa Genzken, Untitled, 2017, © Isa Genzken / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn
Photo 2 of 3 Installation view, Isa Genzken, Untitled, 2017
Photo 3 of 3 Isa Genzken, Untitled, 2012, © Isa Genzken / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn

The mannequins are Genzken’s most explicit engagement yet with the human form, but as with the works resembling buildings, they interrogate the relationship between the built environment, art, commercial goods, and everyday experience.

Other themes which are central to Genzken’s work are considered in several of the wall-mounted works on display. 

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Above Isa Genzken, Untitled, 2012 Wrapping paper, wallpaper, perspex, adhesive tape, lacquer, colour prints, mirror, and framed black and white print. © Isa Genzken / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn
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Above Isa Genzken, Untitled, 2018 Lacquer paint, plastic foil, c-print, shoes, plastic tape, and mirror foil on aluminium panel. © Isa Genzken / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn

In one, modern-day domestic materials like wallpaper and wrapping paper lie underneath photographic reproductions of old master portraits, and a poster of a commercial building in Berlin. In another, an aluminium panel is layered with lacquer paint, plastic foil, c-print, shoes, plastic tape, and mirror foil. A third wall-mounted work is packed with photographs (many taken by Genzken herself), and pieces of fabric. 

“These works highlight how mass media and postwar consumption have increasingly dissolved the lines between the private and the public, and the sacred and the profane.”

- David Zwirner gallery, Hong Kong -

Taken together, the works reveal the sheer breadth of mediums and materials with which Isa Genzken is comfortable. And they underline why her first solo exhibition in Greater China is not to be missed.

 

Works by Isa Genzken are on show from October 20 to December 18 at David Zwirner.

H Queen's houses a number of renowned international art galleries and is located at 80 Queen's Road Central. Find out more at HQueens.com

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