Monday 2 May 2016

Manjunath Kamath


Artville Artist Of The Day
B Manjunath Kamath
Spring Poem
Acrylic on canvas
48 x 60 in

Manjunath Kamath tells stories with his images. His narratives, however, are altered and adjusted constantly, adapting fluidly according to the environment they are narrated in, and resulting in a different meaning each time a story is told. As a visual artist, Kamath feels impelled to regularly reinvent his method of storytelling. By relentlessly working on his articulation and modernizing his techniques, the artist continuously updates his visual vocabulary.

The artist’s need to draw and hold his viewers’ attention is palpable in his varied use of painting, drawing, sculpture and video. With the help of these disparate genres he creates narratives that are gripping in content, even though they are composed of simple, commonplace elements. Thus Kamath’s forte ultimately lies in creating fantasies out of the ordinary.

Kamath usually begins a painting with just one element; this could be drawn from memories of past experiences or the reality of present contexts. He then keeps adding and taking away from the imagery, paying particular attention to structuring throughout this process, and ultimately arrives at a composition that he deems suitable to be the vehicle of his narrative. To Kamath, then, the process of construction is more important than his completed work.

Born in 1972 in Mangalore, Manjunath Kamath obtained his Bachelor’s degree in sculpture from Chamarajendra Academy of Visual Arts, Mysore, in 1994. He was also an artist-in-residence at the School of Art and Design of the University of Wales, Cardiff, in 2002. Kamath’s works have been featured in a number of solo exhibitions, the most recent ones including ‘108 Small Sories’ and ‘Something Happened’ at Gallery Espace, New Delhi, in 2007 and 2006 respectively; and ‘About Something’ at Sridharani Art Gallery, New Delhi, in 1996.

Kamath lives and works in Delhi.
courtesy: http://www.saffronart.com

#art #contemporary #manjunathkamath #artville #artistoftheday

Tuesday 26 April 2016

Anish Kapoor

Artville Artist Of the Day
Anish Kapoor
‘intersection’,
2012

Anish Kapoor is one of the most influential sculptors of his generation. Perhaps most famous for public sculptures that are both adventures in form and feats of engineering, he manoeuvres between vastly different scales, across numerous series of work. Immense PVC skins, stretched or deflated; concave or convex mirrors whose reflections attract and swallow the viewer; recesses carved in stone and pigmented so as to disappear: these voids and protrusions summon up deep-felt metaphysical polarities of presence and absence, concealment and revelation. Forms turn themselves inside out, womb-like, and materials are not painted but impregnated with colour, as if to negate the idea of an outer surface, inviting the viewer to the inner reaches of the imagination. Kapoor’s geometric forms from the early 1980s, for example, rise up from the floor and appear to be made of pure pigment, while the viscous, blood-red wax sculptures from the last ten years – kinetic and self-generating – ravage their own surfaces and explode the quiet of the gallery environment. There are resonances with mythologies of the ancient world – Indian, Egyptian, Greek and Roman – and with modern times, where 20th century events loom large.

Anish Kapoor was born in Bombay, India in 1954 and lives and works in London. He studied at Hornsey College of Art (1973–77) followed by postgraduate studies at Chelsea School of Art, London (1977–78). Recent major solo exhibitions include Chateau de Versailles, Versailles (2015); The Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center, Moscow (2015); Sakıp Sabancı Museum, Istanbul (2013) and Martin Gropius Bau, Berlin (2013). He represented Britain at the 44th Venice Biennale (1990), for which he was awarded the Premio Duemila. He won the Turner Prize in 1991 and has honorary fellowships from the London Institute and Leeds University (1997), the University of Wolverhampton (1999) and the Royal Institute of British Architecture (2001). He was awarded a CBE in 2003 and a Knighthood in 2013 for services to visual arts. Most recently he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Oxford (2014).
courtesy: http://www.lissongallery.com/

#art #contemporary #anishkapoor #artistoftheday #artville

Thursday 21 April 2016

Nalini Malani


Artville Artist Of The Day
Nalini Malani
Splitting the Other
Polytych of fourteen panels, acrylic, ink and enamel reverse painting on acrylic sheet, 200 x 1400 cm, 2007
Malani's work is influenced by her experiences as a refugee of the Partition of India. She places inherited iconographies and cherished cultural stereotypes under pressure. Her point of view is unwaveringly urban and internationalist, and unsparing in its condemnation of a cynical nationalism that exploits the beliefs of the masses. Hers is an art of excess, going beyond the boundaries of legitimized narrative, exceeding the conventional and initiating dialogue.
Characteristics of her work have been the gradual movement towards new media, international collaboration and expanding dimensions of the pictorial surface into the surrounding space as ephemeral wall drawing, installation, shadow play, multi projection works and theatre.
courtesy: http://www.nalinimalani.com/

Saturday 16 April 2016

S.G Vasudev


Artville Artist Of The Day
S.G. Vasudev
Tree Worshippers,
123x154 cms,
2006
In his Cholamandal years, Vasudev lived close to the sea. There was the continual ebb and flow of the sound of the waves beating against sands, the hush of the Casuarina trees, filtering the strong winds through their needle-like leaves, and the scratch of crab-like forms moving across the hard dry crust of the beach. The house was filled with the deep bull-frog like voices of Carnatic maestros, just as the hammers and chisels pounded on the surfaces of the various metal plates and round brass vessels, trays and copper murals that Vasudev and Arnawaz, his artist wife at that time, created as part of the craft making activities that were an integral part of the Cholamandal Artists Village scheme. The idea was to produce an attractive, and at that time, innovative range of crafts, that would free the artists to experiment with their artistic vision, without fear of economic constraints. It was a time, when there was little, or no support at all, from the tradition bound public at Madras, for contemporary art.
courtesy:http://www.saffronart.com/

Tuesday 12 April 2016

Seema Kohli


Artville Artist Of The Day 
Seem Kohli 
Tree Of Life 
48" X 60"
Mixed Media on Canvas

Seema Kholi's vibrant use of colour draw the viewer into a world rich in spiritual dialogue, both explicit and implicit.
Her central theme of the "Golden Womb" is not only symbolic of procureation and the journey of life but also a mediation on the eternal self.
courtesy: http://www.mahuagallery.com/

#art   #contemporary   #seemakohli   #artistoftheday   #artville  

Friday 8 April 2016

Riyas Komu


Artville Artist Of The Day
Riyas Komu
TRAGEDY OF A CARPENTERS SON III
2007
Wood and iron 
210 x 54 x 42 in.
Riyas Komu produces politically charged paintings, sculptures and installations that channel difficult subjects including religion and identity. He grew up in Kerala, where both his father and uncle were politicians and subsequently influenced his world view—planting the drive to tackle and critique government policy and affairs. Perhaps best known for his portraiture, he captures extreme emotions, their intensity understood to be fuelled by the plights of contemporary India. The compositions are always cropped tightly around the face, lest we pay attention to anything but the human subject and the physicality of socio-political inequalities, or of war or of dissolute poverty. Recently, he has focused on several football-related projects, which includes a large scale sculpture installation at the Pompitue Centre in Paris in 2010 and a series of portraits of Indian National Team soccer players.

Wednesday 6 April 2016

Takashi Murakami


Artville Artist Of The Day
Detail of Takashi Murakami's 'The 500 Arhats' | PRIVATE COLLECTION, © 2012 TAKASHI MURAKAMI/KAIKAI KIKI CO., LTD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

The Mori Art Museum is had a special solo exhibition of contemporary artist Takashi Murakami. It has been 14 years since Murakami’s last large-scale exhibition in Japan, though he has been continually internationally praised, working on giant installations at prestigious venues, such as France’s Palace of Versailles and New York’s Rockefeller Center.

For this exhibition, he makes postwar Japan the main theme as he brings together the country’s otaku culture (anime, manga and more) with traditional Japanese art. His 2012 work “The 500 Arhats,” considered to be the largest painting in history (about 100 meters wide), is being shown in Japan for the first time and was originally produced as a way for Murakami to thank Qatar for providing aid to Japan soon after the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake.
courtesy: http://www.japantimes.co.jp/
#art #contemporary #takashimurakami #artistoftheday #artville

Tuesday 5 April 2016

Hema Upadyay


Artville Artist Of The Day
Hema Upadhyay
Killing Site
2008
Acrylic, gouache, dry pastel, photograph on paper, aluminium sheets, resin
183 x 122 x 61 cm

Baroda born and Mumbai based Hema Upadhyay uses photography and sculptural installations to explore notions of personal identity, dislocation, nostalgia and gender. Upadhyay’s work Killing Site draws on the theme of migration and human displacement across Asia. The top of the work is based on Mumbai’s dilapidated shanty towns, here appearing upside down and protruding out like a canopy over Upadhyay’s decorated montage. Upadhyay draws on her own personal and family history of migration to express her concerns and this is expressed through the way she portrays herself in her works. The upturned slums reference the repercussions and socio-economic inequalities that emerge as a hidden consequence of the relentless tide of urban development in the city.
courtesy:http://www.saatchigallery.com/
#art #contemporary #hemaupadhyay #artistoftheday #artville

Monday 4 April 2016

T.V. Santosh


Artville Artist Of The Day
T.V. Santhosh
SPINAL CORD
2005
Oil on canvas
54 x 72 in
Through a silky, infra-red lens Santhosh creates emotional portraits in which the subject is, interestingly, part of the middle ground of the composition. Smoldering in reds and orange, the texture and color of their flesh evokes metal that glows orange as it’s heated. Tending towards imagery sourced from media coverage of terrorism and war, Santhosh provides us with provocative and challenging pieces. The inverse, monochromatic quality of the shadows and highlights allude to film negatives, suggesting an element of supervision and subjection by the media. Santosh is also an accomplished sculptor, using white fiber glass and scrolling neon messages to evoke the “banality of evil”—term coined by Hannah Arendt.
Images presented through high contrast pearly filters are characteristic of Santosh’s work. In a series of paintings from the late 2000s, red-orange and light bulb yellow is puddled with waxy, minty green impressions; the air is ablaze and the message is feverish. In the foreground “X”s and crosses and distant suns float in space as if between the subject of the piece and us the viewer, an apparition witnessed by both.
http://www.aicongallery.com/
‪#‎art‬ ‪#‎contemporary‬ ‪#‎tvsantosh‬ ‪#‎artistoftheday‬ ‪#‎artville‬ 

Saturday 2 April 2016

Prajakta Potnis


Artville Artist Of The Day
Prajakta Potnis
The Kitchen Debate, 2014
Video installation and chopping board
Queens Museum
Through her compelling and unsettling photographs, paintings, sculptures, and installations, Prajakta Potnis wants to reveal what she sees as the web of systems—familial, societal, governmental, temporal—in which we are held and by which we are affected. As she explains: “My endeavor is to build a relationship between the public and the private space, to see how the outside is affected by the inside, how various elements transgress and finally affect an individual.” Transgression of boundaries and the passage of time are themes that run throughout her work, expressed through images of mottled membranes, encroaching masses of mold, or everyday objects wrapped in packing material. In her solo exhibition, “Time Lapse” (2012), Potnis focused on the slight time difference between Mumbai and Kolkata, which she simultaneously exposed and attempted to bridge in her suite of works.
courtesy:www.artsy.net
‪#‎art‬ ‪#‎contemporary‬ ‪#‎prajaktapotnis‬ ‪#‎artville‬ ‪#‎artistoftheday‬

Jitish Kallat


Artville Artist Of The Day 
Jitish Kallat
Public Notice 2
2007
4,479 fibreglass sculptures
Dimensions variable

Within my practice, ’Public Notice 2’ (2007) links up with two key antecedents, ’Public Notice’ (2003) and ’Detergent’ (2004), both works wherein a historical speech is summoned as the central armature of the work. Blurred and sometimes forgotten due to the passage of time, the historical speech is fore-grounded and held up as an apparatus to grade our feats and follies as nations, as humankind. 
’Public Notice 2’ (2007) re-invokes the momentous speech delivered by Mahatma Gandhi on the eve of the historic 400-kilometer ’Dandi March’ lasting about 24 days during the Indian Freedom Struggle. On the 11th of March 1930, prior to setting out to break the brutal Salt Act instituted by the British, Gandhi laid out the codes of conduct for his fellow revolutionaries. He called for complete ’Civil Disobedience’; the only fierce restriction being that of maintaining ’total peace’ and ’absolute non-violence’. 
The speech has within it several themes that may aid our ailing world, plagued as it is with aggression. In today’s terror-infected world, where wars against terror are fought at prime television time, voices such as Gandhi’s stare back at us like discarded relics. The entire speech will be constructed out of about 4500 recreations of bones shaped like alphabets. Each alphabet in this speech, like a misplaced relic will hold up the image of violence in clinical clarity even as their collective chorus makes a plea for peace. 
Within the Indian context as well, we have the worst instance of subversion of Gandhi’s words in the year 2002 within his own home state of Gujarat. The historic ’Dandi March’ and the speech were delivered not far from the site where India saw one of the worst communal riots and bloodshed since the Indian Independence. 
Jitish Kallat 
Mumbai 

Public Notice 2 recalls the historic speech delivered by Mahatma Gandhi, on the eve of the epic Salt March to Dandi, in early 1930 as a protest against the salt tax instituted by the British. Through this speech he lays down the codes of conduct for his fellow revolutionaries, calling for complete civil disobedience, the only fierce restriction being that of maintaining ‘total peace’ and ‘absolute non-violence’. In Kallat’s work, Gandhi’s ardent speech is recreated as a haunting installation with around 4500 bone shaped alphabets recalling a turning point in the nation’s history. Each alphabet, like a misplaced relic, holds up the image of violence even as their collective chorus makes a plea for peace to a world plagued with aggression.
courtesy: http://www.saatchigallery.com

#art  #contemporary #jitishkallat #artistoftheday   #artville 

Wednesday 30 March 2016

Sudarshan Shetty


Artville Artist Of The Day
Sudarshan Shetty
No Title
(from "this too shall pass")
teak wood, motor mechanical device
258 x 146 x 141 cm
2010
The show ‘this too shall pass’ is built around the notions of permanence and the ‘artifice’ of presenting it.
‘this too shall pass’ attempts, through a world of representations and suggestions, to play on the viewer’s encounters with the quotidian worlds of the city, home and street as they incorporate everyday objects, machine parts and readymades, easily available in the streets around my home and studio in Mumbai.
The assemblages suggestci and embed traces of urban processing as the ty itself serves as the artist’s studio, while the gallery is infused with the performative qualities of the street.
Drawing on a world of shared meaning, the object-assemblage materially incorporates and disperses those shared meanings into the viewer’s experience.
courtesy: http://galleryske.com/

Tuesday 29 March 2016

Bharti Kher



 
Artist Of The Day
Bharti Kher
The hot winds that blow from the West (detail),
2011
131 old radiators
 76 3/4 x 103 7/8 x 100 in

New York, NY… Beginning March 6, 2012, Hauser & Wirth New York will present ‘The hot winds that blow from the West’, its first exhibition devoted to internationally admired artist Bharti Kher.

Through a group of five works, the London-born, Delhi-based artist further plumbs metaphysical questions raised by our relationship to life’s quotidian activities and objects. Kher has described her practice as ‘the hunt for a chimera,’ a search through which she has come to see the self as a multiple open to interpretation, projection and shape-shifting. Her artmaking – including collecting and transforming found objects in a process that might best be described as fabulation – yields an air of magical realism. In ‘The hot winds that blow from the West,’ the artist plays with mythology, cultural and gender stereotypes, and tropes of domesticity to map a route on which viewers may travel between the familiar and the alien, the mundane and the divine, all while remaining in one place.

‘The hot winds that blow from the West’ will remain on view through April 14, 2012.

Responding to the intimate domestic architecture of Hauser & Wirth’s East 69th Street townhouse, Bharti Kher has choreographed her works in a sequence that draws visitors through physical and psychological space. Domestic life is a persistent theme in her work, and the home front becomes a landscape where the material, the emotional and the allegorical mix. ‘In Asia and India, the house and domestic space constitute a female domain and this is where women are able to truly assert more ‘self’ within space,’ Kher has said. ‘But a house is also fraught with social, economic and sexual excesses that can obscure or even threaten to obliterate the spiritual connections that are our greatest resources.’ In a house, such everyday objects as the furniture and architectural elements Kher uses to construct her works, carry divine cosmic energies awaiting our engagement.

In ‘The hot winds that blow from the West,’ Kher introduces her themes – male and female energies in flux, transformation and alternative realities, nature and man – with a large wall-mounted work titled ‘A view of the forest.’

Entering the gallery’s main ground floor space, visitors will discover a massive 17 foot-long staircase. This defunct architectural fragment from an old house in India occupies the center of the room, reaching the ceiling but leading nowhere; by thwarting its purpose, Kher creates a sense of disorientation. The staircase has been splashed with red paint and covered with a swarm of black, sperm-shaped bindis, the iconic personal affect of Indian women that is one of Kher’s signature materials and a loaded symbol. Since first appearing in her work in 1995, the bindi has telegraphed aesthetic and cultural duality, and a means to mix the superficial with the sublime. ‘Many people believe it’s a traditional symbol of marriage while others, in the West particularly, see it as a fashion accessory,’ she has explained. ‘But actually the bindi is meant to represent a third eye – one that forges a link between the real and the spiritual-conceptual worlds.’

In the sky lit back room of the gallery’s ground floor, visitors will find the work from which the exhibition takes its title. ‘The hot winds that blow from the West’ is a monolith comprised of old radiators sourced by Kher in the United States over the course of six years and shipped to India. Ultimate symbols of domestic comfort in the West, these displaced appliances have been unmoored both literally and figuratively; the journey eastward has removed their purpose and altered their significance. With its rows of pipes and peeling paint, this stack of defunct tools evokes decaying animal carcasses with ribs exposed. Here, the powerfully familiar is transmuted into something otherworldly, alien and elusive.

The title of this work is a reference to The Loo, a fiercely hot, maddening and occasionally even fatal summer afternoon wind that blows across North India and Pakistan. ‘We think of winds as harbingers of change, carrying voices of transformation,’ Kher has said. ‘From where I sit, the winds blowing nowadays from the West – from the places that were the seats of power and authority throughout the 20th century – are no longer as strong or reliable as they were. Other voices are changing the landscape now and political uncertainties have put the world in flux, feeling precarious. Traveling East, these radiators became defunct. I suppose I am sending them back to the West as messenger and, perhaps, as warnings.’

On the gallery’s second floor, the exhibition continues with two works. A life-sized fiberglass figure – part woman and part animal – brandishes a pitchfork and dances on one foot. Powerful and vulnerable with exposed genitals and a monkey tail curling up over her shoulder, this apparition is described by Kher as ‘an urban witch, a woman of both mythology and everyday life, a hybrid.’ The sculpture is the most recent in a series of figurative works in which Kher has presented hybrid beings that conjoin contradictions of gender, species, race and role. For this work, the artist has drawn upon the attributes of the Hindu goddess Dakini, who is considered the manifestation of energy in female form. Associated with revelations, Dakini (Sanskrit for she who traverses the sky or she who moves in space) is an agent of creation and transformation – a willful instigator, messenger, and even a volatile trickster whose purpose is to push souls further towards enlightenment. Kher’s figure is elegant and alien, a simultaneous celebration of and rebuke to conventional female roles.

The rest of the exhibition envelopes visitors in an installation titled ‘Reveal the secrets that you seek,’ presented last spring at the Centre Pompidou in Paris. A journey ends here among twenty-seven shattered, salvaged mirrors patterned with bindis that conflate two and three dimensions. Whereas Kher customarily employs dense, swirling patterns of the tiny dots, bindis in this work are fashioned for the first time into strict, structured grids of lines that imply codes of concealed information. In the larger collage of the work’s broken reflections and frames, a visitor’s own visage becomes part of the artist’s composition. ‘It is assumed that because I was raised by Indian parents in England and then moved to India myself, I am commenting upon my own displacement or my own journey,’ Kher commented. ‘But my motivation does not come from the usual issues of diaspora. I am always far more interested in the viewer’s journey than my own. I get my ideas from you.’
courtesy: http://www.hauserwirth.com/
#art   #contemporaryart   #barthikher   #artistoftheday   #artville

Monday 28 March 2016

Atul Dodiya


Artville Artist Of The Day
Atul Dodiya
One of India’s most celebrated contemporary artists, Atul Dodiya has created a niche for himself not just in India but internationally. The history and culture of his home country plays a significant role in constructing the barrage of images that inform his oeuvre. Launching his career with a rather straightforward and cleverly deadpan realist approach, he switched to the fragmented and multi-layered approach from the literal one in the mid-90s.
Conscious of history, his rich oeuvre reflects his deep knowledge about immediate surroundings, current events and ancient religious traditions. He often quotes from the recesses of Indian as well as Western art traditions. Even his potent pictorial language can be attributed to his to adoption and usage of the vocabulary of Western contemporary art. Driven by intellect, intensity and ideas, he continues to experiment with many forms. According to him, ‘I’ve always tried to retain that student phase in Sir J.J. School of Art when seeing a new form or new medium greatly excited us about its possibilities.’ Even as he strives to bring contemporary Indian art into a closer, deeper embrace with Western Post-Modernist art, Atul Dodiya also looks to the former closer to its fundamental roots, through re-adjustment, and reproaches to mythological and cultural figure. His recent shutter paintings at Art Basel 2010 courtesy Chemould Prescott Road respond to iconic paintings from the 1970s by late Bhupen Khakhar, called ‘trade series’, depicting middle-class figures from a wide range of professions.
courtesy:www.theartstrust.com

Saturday 26 March 2016

N.S.Harsha

Artville Artist Of The Day
NS Harsha
Why,
2014
Acrylic on canvas, 61 x 86 cm 24 1/8 x 33 7/8 in

NS Harsha draws on a broad spectrum of Indian artistic and figurative painting traditions and popular arts as well as the western art canon to create luminous works that reflect on geopolitical order and its localised idiosyncrasies. In exquisitely rendered paintings, works on paper, wall and floor works, sculptures, site-specific installations and public projects, the Mysore-based artist examines structures, borders and barriers as a series of ever-shifting concepts, alluding to an interconnectedness that compels the viewer to consider their relationship to the art work as part of a wider conversation about systems of knowledge, belief and power.
#art #contemporaryartist #nsharsha #artville #artistoftheday

Thursday 24 March 2016

Gerhard Richter


Artville Artist Of The Day
Gerhard Richter
Strip
2011 300 cm x 300 cm Catalogue Raisonné: 922-2
Digital print on paper between Alu Dibond and Perspex (Diasec)
Gerhard Richter was born to Horst and Hildegard Richter in Dresden on February 9, 1932. Having married the year before, Gerhard was their first child, with a daughter, Gisela, arriving in 1936. Horst Richter, with whom Gerhard did not have a close relationship, was a teacher at a secondary school in Dresden.1 Hildegard was a bookseller and, like her father, a talented pianist. She was passionate about literature, and passed on her enthusiasm and knowledge to the young Gerhard. They were, in many respects, an average middle-class family. In an interview with Robert Storr Richter described his early family life as "simple, orderly, structured – mother playing the piano and the father earning money".2
In 1935, Horst was offered a post at a school in Reichenau, then a part of Saxony, now Bogatynia in Poland. The family duly moved to the town, which was much smaller and less stimulating than Dresden.3 While living there was to prove much safer than being in Dresden when the war began, it perhaps marked the beginning of a gradual deterioration in the relationship between Horst and Hildegard. The strain was increased when Horst was conscripted into the German army. He left to fight first on the eastern front and then on the western front where he was captured by the Allied forces and detained in an American prisoner of war camp until the end of the war. In 1946 he was released and returned to his family, who by now had relocated from Reichenau to the even smaller Waltersdorf, a village on the Czech border.
On his return, Horst's reception was not as warm as he might have hoped. Commenting on this many years later, Gerhard explained: "He shared most fathers' fate at the time… Nobody wanted them."4 In an interview with Jan Thorn-Prikker in 2004 he added: "[We] were so alienated from him that we didn't know how to deal with each other."5 Although he seemed to have held neutral political opinions, Horst's former membership of the National Socialist Party – an organization that all teachers had been obliged to join – made it virtually impossible to return to teaching. He worked for a while in a textile mill in nearby Zittau before finding a post as an administrator of a distance learning program for an educational institution in Dresden.6
Gerhard's own memories of his early years are a combination of fondness and frustration, sadness and excitement. While his family left Dresden when Richter was only three years old, he recalls the house in which he was born in Grossenhainer Strasse, and in particular the house of his great-grandmother "not far from the original Circus Sarrasani building, where as a young lad I could see the elephant stalls through the cellar windows. My great-grandmother's sewing box, made of armadillo skin. A man falling from a ladder – something that, according to my parents, only I had seen".7 Little is documented about Gerhard's memories of Reichenau, though his recollections about his time in Waltersdorf are more vivid, not least because when they moved to the village, he was already more than ten years old. He has been described as "a highly gifted child but notoriously bad in school"8 with Dietmar Elger noting that "he even brought home poor grades in drawing".9 He dropped out of grammar school in Zittau and attended instead a vocational school, where he studied stenography, accounting and Russian. In addition to not enjoying school, he felt he didn't really belong in Waltersdorf. He recalled, "We had moved to a new village, and automatically I was an outsider. I couldn't speak the dialect and so on."10 Like most boys of his age, he was obliged to join the Pimpfen in 1942, an organization for children that prepared them for the Hitler Youth. Fortunately, he was just a little too young to have been conscripted to the army himself during the last year of the war.11
Despite living in the countryside, Gerhard's experience of the war was nonetheless intense. Apart from economic hardship and the absence of his father for several important years in his development, his family did not escape personal loss, with Hildegard's two brothers, Rudi and Alfred, both being killed in active service. "It was sad when my mother's brothers fell in battle. First one, then the other. I'll never forget how the women screamed."12 Hildegard's sister Marianne also encountered a regrettable end to her life: suffering from mental health problems, as a result of the eugenics policies of the Third Reich she starved to death in a psychiatric clinic.13
While spared much of the direct bombing to which nearby Dresden was exposed, the war was very much present in Waltersdorf. Speaking to Jan Thorn-Prikker, Gerhard remembers, "The retreating German soldiers, the convoys, the low-flying Russian planes shooting at refugees, the trenches, the weapons lying around everywhere, artillery, broken down cars. Then the invasions of the Russians […] the ransacking, rapes, a huge camp where us kids sometimes got barley soup."14 Gerhard was fascinated by the military, commenting, "When the soldiers came through the village, I went up to them and wanted to join them."15 Speaking to Robert Storr, he explained, "When you're twelve years old you're too little to understand all that ideological hocus-pocus".16 With boyish curiosity and a sense of adventure, he and his friends would play in the woods and trenches, shooting rifles that they had found lying around. "I thought it was great. […] I was fascinated, like all kids, or all boys".17 Although he was young, he understood the significance of the war, and in February 1945, recalls the virtual obliteration of Dresden: "In the night, everyone came out into the street in this village 100 kilometers away. Dresden was being bombed, 'Now, at this moment!'"18
The end of World War II in many ways coincided with Gerhard's transition from childhood to adolescence, and, now under Soviet control following the Potsdam Agreement, it was to be a very different Germany to the one he had been born into.
courtesy:www.gerhard-richter.com