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[November 8th 2002]
press release
Jakob Kolding
New Collages
26. October - 14. December
Gallery Nicolai Wallner
Njalsgade 21, bygn. 15
2300 København S
Tel. +45 32 57 09 70
Fax +45 32 57 09 71
Tu-Fr 12-17, Sa 12-15
nw@nicolaiwallner.com
www.nicolaiwallner.com
Images
from the exhibition
It is a great pleasure to present an exhibition with Jakob
Kolding. A selection of new collages revolves around different
aspects of town planning and life in the city and in suburbia.
Juxtaposing suburban blocks, images of dj's, hip hoppers, graffiti,
Starwars, computer games, malls, public art works and single-family
house areas, Kolding examines the complex socio-economical and
political conditions of city life.
Kolding's work stems from his own experiences of growing up in
a rigidly planned new town suburb. This type of town planning
originates from a generation of utopian architects from the fifties
and sixties. e.g. Le Corbusier and Walter Gropius. The discrepancy
between ideology and ideals on the one hand and the actual living
conditions on the other hand is in fact a failure of this kind
of structural and logical planning of space. Kolding is interested
in how town planning tries to incorporate various social activities
in modelling a future town (e.g. recreational areas, playgrounds,
traffic division) and how these theoretical approaches are inadequate
and cannot take the actual living conditions into account. Kolding
uses statements from architectural theory that thematize various
aspects of town planning and opposes them to playful and chaotic
images and drawings. The rigid architecture and the prejudice
against it, is in his work dissolved by images of pop cultural
activities that merge from suburban blocks and bring life to them.
A town is not static, it is characterized by the people who inhabit
it.
The inhabitants succeed in creating a personal space in the blocks
of conformity. Different socio-cultural aspects create and invade
the space and make it dynamic. Kolding uses images of graffiti,
local football teams, public art works, science fiction movies,
comics, hip hoppers, the malls of consumer culture and computer
games as an illustration of life in suburbia. All these aspects
of city culture constitute social identities and local affiliations.
They function as different approaches to Kolding's work where
some spectators may identify with the subcultural elements while
others focus on the references to modernist art and architecture.
His non-hierarchic representation of high and low is presented
in the cut-up sampled technique that characterizes the collage
as a media. Not only do his very aesthetic and refined collages
have a formal affinity with Russian Constructivism, El Lissitsky,
Rodchenko and Bauhaus, they also resemble the making of the electronic,
sampled music of pop culture.
Jakob Kolding has recently made the cover for the new Saint Etienne
album.
He has exhibited in museums and institutions in North America,
Europe and Asia. This is his second solo exhibition in Galleri
Nicolai Wallner.
We welcome you in the gallery.
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