...Page is loading...

Lost password?
Need an account? Sign up!
It's free of costs.

Sign up as artist Sign up as guest Sign up as dealer
Back to login
Back to login

Erik Schmidt Main Profile Image

Erik Schmidt

Berlin

Drawing, Painting, Video • Born in Herford • Studied at Hamburg/Berlin

Published  23/03/2016   |   Updated  21/02/2020

The Only Way is Up

If paint once served to depict landscapes and cityscapes, it has now become, in Erik Schmidt’s work, an amplifier of the metropolis’s latent, dynamic energy. Within Schmidt’s practise, this behaviour of oil paint exudes a complexity of attributes and attitudes — a kind of personality, which echoes that of urban phenomenology itself. This resonance between technique and subject-matter has for years constituted his work’s mimetic spark....

Read more

If paint once served to depict landscapes and cityscapes, it has now become, in Erik Schmidt’s work, an amplifier of the metropolis’s latent, dynamic energy. Within Schmidt’s practise, this behaviour of oil paint exudes a complexity of attributes and attitudes — a kind of personality, which echoes that of urban phenomenology itself. This resonance between technique and subject-matter has for years constituted his work’s mimetic spark. In one sense, the videos he has long made, like the photographs upon which he now paints, evince a cool detachment from their subject the city. At the same time, the work is warmed by comedic self awareness, and a richly embodied relationship to medium: grainy lm, slick video, lush paint.

These days, Schmidt’s subject is Berlin. His engagement with the mercurial capital city can be traced to his 2001 video Parking. Echoing the historic comedic conceptualists — Bas Jan Ader, Bruce Nauman —Parking found Schmidt looking for a place to park his car, amidst the towering housing projects of former East Berlin. Lest this picture evoke the somber themes of German post-war history, it is shaded with comic absurdity. There is subtle irony, in the very gesture of looking for a parking spot, in turn of the millennium Berlin. This was a Berlin that had not been fully re-populated, that was yet to become one of the world’s most attractive destinations for immigration, that was still finding its way out of economic depression — a city whose primary resource was space. Schmidt’s dry voiceover rounds out the piece’s sly comedic tone. So too a softly bubbling techno soundtrack. Like his new paint- ings, that video possessed a certain incongruous optimism.

Now, with Berlin having morphed into an altogether different place, Schmidt has begun paint- ing on immense photographs of the city, printed on durable, industrial strength poster paper. This material recalls the advertisements that now plaster the metropolis, resonating both a rich cultural spirit, and the mixed effects of capitalist development. The bird’s eye perspective of these photographs loops back into Schmidt’s artistic history. Their elevated viewpoints evoke the housing projects in Parking, and the preposterous, quasi-dystopian urban ascents that he enacted in a later video work, The Bottom Line (2018). Simultaneously, the photographs’ oblong, disorienting perspectives resonate the ambulatory perspective of driving through the city’s streets and boulevards. Thus the work is comprised of layered echoes. To further add an element of disorientation some of the works are shown upside down. Just as the historical city exerts its presence in the transformational present, the history of Schmidt’s own work, informs his ongoing mimicry of this process, through photography and painting.

In these new paintings, luscious, streaking globs of oil paint — cotton candy pink, sky blue, pistachio green — mimic Berlin’s thronging technological and human rhythms. Each time one colorful splotch overlaps a bustling street or a staccato cluster of buildings, an oil stain blooms into the photograph. Here is evidence of Schmidt’s insouciant attitude to painting — a relationship to the act of art-making, defined by a weave of skepticism and enthusiasm.
If this attitude is motivated by an unsureness about what art can do in the world, it makes sense to find it articulated by an unruly combination of photographed city life, and the boisterous materials of art-making. The two bleed together, in perfectly imperfect unison. In this way, paint becomes an analogue for the unruly bodily energy, which flows and pulses through tides of architectural and social transformation.

Mitch Speed


Photo Avatar: Stephanie Kloss

Erik Schmidt
The Only Way Is Up, exhibition view, Carlier | Gebauer, 2019, Berlin

The Only Way Is Up, exhibition view, Carlier | Gebauer, 2019, Berlin

The Only Way Is Up, exhibition view, Carlier | Gebauer, 2019, Berlin

The Only Way Is Up, exhibition view, Carlier | Gebauer, 2019, Berlin

The Only Way Is Up, exhibition view, Carlier | Gebauer, 2019, Berlin

The Only Way Is Up, exhibition view, Carlier | Gebauer, 2019, Berlin

Thomas Cook, 40,5 x 27,5 cm, 2019, Oil on fine art print on canvas, exhibition view, Carlier | Gebauer, Berlin

Thomas Cook, 40,5 x 27,5 cm, 2019, Oil on fine art print on canvas, exhibition view, Carlier | Gebauer, Berlin

City of the Moon, 218 x 294 cm, 2019, Oil on fine art print on canvas, exhibition view, Carlier | Gebauer, Berlin

City of the Moon, 218 x 294 cm, 2019, Oil on fine art print on canvas, exhibition view, Carlier | Gebauer, Berlin

Further Up & Further In, exhibition view, Galerie Krinzinger, Vienna

Further Up & Further In, exhibition view, Galerie Krinzinger, Vienna

Das Problem mit der Durchsicht, 228 cm x 148cm, oil on fine art print on canvas, exhibition view, Galerie Krinzinger, Vienna

Das Problem mit der Durchsicht, 228 cm x 148cm, oil on fine art print on canvas, exhibition view, Galerie Krinzinger, Vienna

Further Up & Further In, exhibition view, Galerie Krinzinger, Vienna

Further Up & Further In, exhibition view, Galerie Krinzinger, Vienna

The Bottom Line (movie), Further Up & Further In, exhibition view, Galerie Krinzinger, Vienna

The Bottom Line (movie), Further Up & Further In, exhibition view, Galerie Krinzinger, Vienna

"Skyscanner", Galerie Jochen Hempel, 2018, Leipzig (Fot. Uwe Walter)

"Skyscanner", Galerie Jochen Hempel, 2018, Leipzig (Fot. Uwe Walter)

"Skyscanner", Galerie Jochen Hempel, 2018, Leipzig (Fot. Uwe Walter)

"Skyscanner", Galerie Jochen Hempel, 2018, Leipzig (Fot. Uwe Walter)

Powerlines, 2017

Powerlines, 2017

Studio Erik Schmidt, 2017

Studio Erik Schmidt, 2017

courtesy Galerie Krinzinger / photo: Tamara Rametsteiner

courtesy Galerie Krinzinger / photo: Tamara Rametsteiner

"Rays Around You", carlier I gebauer , Berlin, 2017

"Rays Around You", carlier I gebauer , Berlin, 2017

"Rays Around You", carlier I gebauer, 2017, Berlin

"Rays Around You", carlier I gebauer, 2017, Berlin

courtesy Galerie Krinzinger / photo: Tamara Rametsteiner

courtesy Galerie Krinzinger / photo: Tamara Rametsteiner

courtesy Galerie Krinzinger / photo: Tamara Rametsteiner

courtesy Galerie Krinzinger / photo: Tamara Rametsteiner

courtesy Galerie Krinzinger / photo: Tamara Rametsteiner

courtesy Galerie Krinzinger / photo: Tamara Rametsteiner

http://taguchiartcollection.jp/artists/erik-schmidt/

http://taguchiartcollection.jp/artists/erik-schmidt/

produktion-still: Stephanie Kloss

produktion-still: Stephanie Kloss

Erik Schmidt studio

Erik Schmidt studio

Studio building

Studio building


WORKS IN COLLECTIONS

Belvedere, Vienna, Austria

Berlinische Galerie, Videosammlung, Berlin, Germany

Bolder University, Texas, USA

show all

GALLERIES

carlier I gebauer | www.carliergebauer.com

Galerie Krinzinger | http://www.galerie-krinzinger.at

Other artists...

more artists...