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born 1975 in Leipzig, raised in Suhl
1997 - 2002 studies Fine Art (Painting) at Hochschule für Grafik
& Buchkunst Leipzig
lives and works in Leipzig
No doubt, Paule Hammer is a painter. Yet often, the two dimensions of
a sheet of paper or canvas are insufficient to express his idiosyncratically
enigmatic designs of the world. If that is the case, he makes use of space:
a wooden shack is packed with portraits of Elvis, Marilyn Monroe, Johnny
Cash, Hannelore Kohl, the protagonists from Planet of The Apes. It is
covered with the jackets and trousers awarded to honour glam-rockers and
with mutant hub cap shields. Conceived as a gigantic 3-dimensional painting,
Hammer called this installation Walhalla (2002). Although lacking gold
leaf, it radiated with the power of religious icon painting.
Laden für Nichts, a self-contained gallery of manageable proportions,
which now exists only as a flat-pack replica of the original space, seems
to lend itself perfectly to the needs of Hammer’s installations. His work
seeks to embrace, warm and surround the observer. Sometimes his installations
resemble altars decorated with devotional objects culled from Pop culture.
They urge the viewer to attend worship whilst delivering a critique of
idolatry at the same time.
Occasionally, Hammer consciously seeks the outrageous, almost pornographic,
bloody and brutal: Pin-up girls juxtaposed with quaint pictures of posies
hang alongside a crucified Donald Duck next to the calligraphic caption
Get me out of here, Mum! - the title of the work included in the show
Rund ums Bild at Kunstraum B/2 in 2003. Wanderlust and a thirst for adventure
are perennial themes throughout Hammer’s work. In Edle Einfalt - Stille
Größe (noble inanity - silent magnitude) for instance, an installation
realised at Laden für Nichts, a portrait of Captain Hammer peers down
at the visitor through a lifebuoy - indeed, to one day become a sailor
was a childhood dream.
Recently, the artist has devoted himself to experiments with more abstract
compositions, as in Die meisten Menschen sind nicht O.K. (most people
are not okay) shown at the 2003 Leipziger Jahresausstellung. Similarly,
Hammer’s most recent show titled Ahab, included surprisingly minimalist
and abstract works. Ahab was centred around a radiant, large tondo, a
cosmic image reminiscent of a NASA satellite photo. The picture was inspired
by Melville’s Moby Dick - more than anyone else aboard, Captain Ahab thinks
about the situation on board the Pequod. Although he is fully aware that
he can choose to act otherwise, he is compelled to take revenge on inanimate
nature. Ahab must do what Ahab must.
Hendrik Pupat
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