Pál Gerber - A Retrospective

17. June, 2010 – 15. August
When
17. June, 2010 – 15. August

Pál Gerber - A Retrospective

One of Ludwig Museums individual oeuvres, the retrospective exhibition of Pál Gerber presents twenty-five years work of an artist bringing everyday objects and phenomena into contact with one another in an ironic, reflective or enigmatic approach expressing tactful and humorous social criticism.

Curator: Kata Oltai

Pál Gerber`s career began in the late eighties, during the last period of the so called goulash communism. His childhood years in Tatabánya and the industrial milieu of the city left a strong mark on Gerber, who later moved to Budapest. His works bring back the well-known, smiled upon or rather repulsive slogans, object culture, colour schemes, ever familiar greyness, thought associations and object ensembles of the Kádár era. As a young painter, the new economic and political climate of the nineties elicited a shift in his art, which did, however, retain its fundamental feature - that is, above all, a continuous dialogue with the surrounding world and with the visible and invisible layers of mass culture. With his precisely articulated motifs - be it a highlighted excerpt, a stumbled-upon classified ad or a visual element - he creates unexpected associations and enigmatic references to history and culture.

Pál Gerbers retrospective exhibition is the next event of the Ludwig Museum series introducing artists oeuvres. Deriving from the material of the legendary Kék Acél (Blue Steel) exhibition held in the year of the regime-change (1989), Ludwig Museums show draws an imaginary arc tracing Gerbers 25-year-long journey as an artist. This is a varied oeuvre in terms of genres as well. Instead of addressing this diversity through the obvious chronological approach, however, the exhibition uses juxtaposition in its interpretation of the material. Thus it seeks to establish a dialogue both with Gerbers oeuvre and between the individual works as well. Although the audience may have seen Gerbers work at a number of exhibitions through the years, such a multifaceted dialogue has not been realised before.

In addition to such new works as the According to Law series (2010), The Truth Sets You Free (2010), and Dust on Modernism (2010), Pál Gerbers earlier installations will also be featured, including <i>Hope in Skilled Labour</i> (1994), and, exhibited for the first time in Hungary, <i>I Dont Like Pessimism (1992). His works commenting on the world, the actors, the trends and the operating mechanisms of art (The Weight of Art – Uplifting Art, 2010; Price Pictures, 2008; Creative Artist Hard at Work at Developing His Own Unique Style of Form, 1991/2010), and his more explicitly political and socially critical pieces (Ochre Flag, 2005; Oil Stain, We Are a Small Country, 1992; Living without Self-Critique, 2006/2010) will also be presented. Gerber usually highlights the banal, unarticulated, lurking repressions and bittersweet truths of the everyday world that surrounds us (Woman`s Handbag with a Broken String of Beads, 2003; Gabi's Short Story, 2005/2010; Object Caught on the Chandelier, 1998).

The 280-page catalogue of the exhibition attempts to foster a deeper understanding of the artist’s oeuvre. Authors: Sándor Hornyik, Gábor Pataki, János Sturcz, Erzsébet Tatai. Editor: Kata Oltai. The catalogue is available at the exhibition space.