Galaxis - "veruschka" Vera Lehndorff&holger Trülzsch
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5
8
180,0
120,0
180,0 x 120,0 cm
£ 1.080,00
LIMITED EDITION, EDITION OF: 100, SIGNED,
LAMBDA COLOR PHOTOGRAPH, NO.: VTR13
90,0
60,0
90,0 x 60,0 cm
£ 310,00
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External dimension: 180 x 120 cm
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  • Introduction
  • CV
  • Exhibitions
  • Publications

A UNIVERSE TO ONESELF

With his masterpiece Blow-Up (1966) Michelangelo Antonioni cemented Vera Lehndorff’s status as fashion-world icon “Veruschka.” From the time of the legendary photos by Richard Avedon, shortly before the film was made, it was self-evident that the top model would be up to the role.

In Antonioni’s movie, swinging London’s fashion photographer David Hemmings attempts during a photo shoot to take possession of the woman’s thin, long body, which in its filigree, nearly fragile-seeming proportions always gave off the aura of inapproachability. Solely with the camera’s lens is he able to snatch a moment of this woman’s mystery. Her distinctive elegance seems to elude any worldly estimate. Had Veruschka modeled for a sculptor, then presumably the emerging sculptures would not have looked unlike Giacometti’s figures.

In the photographic series that Vera Lehndorff designed in collaboration with Holger Trülzsch, the aesthetic figure Veruschka refuses to be a projection of beauty’s ideals, yet in these portraits she retains her completely individual aura. Diffused in bolts of energy, in bizarre particle streams, and in psychedelic plays of color that reflect London of the 1960s, Veruschka transcends her body and delves into a world that translates the glamour of an icon into a sensually experiential image.

Even if the forms into which Veruschka transforms cannot be grasped, they always bear the artist’s female touch. Her body constructs an in-between universe, one which plays by its very own set of rules. Here the artist’s aura meets the blackness of an endless nothing. If these photographs could emit sound, it would be the spherical tones of Pink Floyd. Even if body parts have been alienated into unrecognizability, for the viewer they always remain the eye’s reference point to a world that lies outside of human experience. Never will a human be closer to not being from this world, come so close, as in these photographs. A privilege Hemmings could only dream of.

David Gärtner



ON HOLGER TRÜLZSCH

The sculptor, photographer, and video artist Holger Trülzsch undertakes large artistic projects, most often in multimedia, which always hinge on a desire for autonomy and a conceptual approach. This approach is committed to the concrete manifestation of ideas and the materialization of phenomena. His conceptual projects for the most part have to do with architecture and public space. They take up the subject of current political and social relationships and reveal the res publica as the absolute concern of his production.

The artist’s works show an excellent handling and mastery of space – the dynamics and tension between forms become visible. They appear in both static and shifting visions and are portrayed by their intellectual application of the mass, by relevant plays of transparency and reflection. The majority of his installations – whether permanent or temporarily, whether sculpture, painting, or photography – deal with light. Trülzsch’s signature can immediately be recognized in the collaboration with Vera Lehndorff, aka Veruschka, in the series “Signs.” In these photographs, the philosophical, analytical discourse is implemented with critique and irony in the two artists’ unique artistic language.

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