Anton Kern Gallery
Skip to main content
  • Menu
  • Home
  • Artists
  • Exhibitions
  • WINDOW
  • Fairs
  • News
  • Store
  • Info
Cart
0 items $
Checkout

Item added to cart

View cart & checkout
Continue shopping
Menu

Tausendmal Du: Ellen Gronemeyer

Past exhibition
November 3 - December 18, 2021
  • Overview
  • Installation Views
  • Works
  • Publications
Overview
Ellen Gronemeyer flabbergasted, 2021 Oil on canvas 63 x 55 1/8 inches (160 x 140 cm)
Ellen Gronemeyer
flabbergasted, 2021
Oil on canvas
63 x 55 1/8 inches
(160 x 140 cm)

For her second exhibition at Anton Kern Gallery, Berlin-based artist Ellen Gronemeyer chose nineteen paintings: sparkling, densely painted, with turbulent surfaces, dark yet luminous compositions. Their motifs have slowly grown out of layers of heavy paint, and the viewer can discern not just shapes and figures but also fields of crusty paint that have become just as alive as the paintings’ protagonists. The paint itself has taken on an active role in these narratives. Areas of restless brush strokes and craggy paint skin set the paintings’ mood. Byzantium purple, golden yellow, teal, and black; canary yellow, dark orange, sky blue, and black; hot pink, electric blue, turquoise, fuchsia, and black. The viewer feels immersed in the sounds of an imaginary color organ. Black strikes the keynote and sets the rhythmic structure, secondary and tertiary colors build the harmonic system, tints with white create space, movement, and speed.

 

The new paintings redirect the metamorphic energy of her previous work, the focus having shifted from interaction between protagonists to depictions of single figures: a dog, a reclining youth, a snake, a drinker, a mermaid (or is it a merman?), a melting ice cube, and a couple of close-up faces. The figures seem still, pensive, sometimes melancholic, at any rate content and in unison with their slightly shadowy environment. Perhaps the mermaid seems a bit at odds with its awkward position in the painting, her horizontally outstretched body balancing on the cusp of an enormous wave of deep dark paint.

 

The question of transformation lies at the core of Gronemeyer’s work. Obviously, transformation is what painting can do: mess with the rules of nature, create unlikely scenarios. The artist seems to suggest something more, however: that these changes are possible, that they can be observed in real life, or at least nearly witnessed, glimpsed at for just a second. The surprise and shock of these paintings result not just from the improbability of their scenarios or the artist’s vocabulary of metaphors, but from the way they are made. Paint and brushstrokes merge into the figures, and figures dissolve into flickering surface patterns. Figure and ground seem barely separated — occasionally by a soft back light. 

 

A bouncy red creature appears at the very bottom of a large, almost entirely figure-less painting. It stares with friendly enthusiasm at a disembodied toothy mouth beyond a wall of paint-flames into a vast, dark shimmering surface of paint, a space of seemingly endless associations. A dark-chocolate-colored dog, gently back-lit, stares attentively right past the viewer. At first glance the animal seems awkwardly situated, but within the logic of Gronemeyer’s paintings, it comfortably settles into a ground of orange, green, and pink paint. The dog seems so convincingly at home in the painterly color-space that the viewer starts to read that space as natural and plausible. 

 

Herein lies Gronemeyer’s magic. It is her ability to transform metaphor into paint, so that the physical works themselves become the protagonists in her world of open possibilities. An illogical world for sure, but one where seriousness and profundity are contained in the interplay between the artist’s cast of characters and her color-trembles and humming, gnarly brush marks — a world in which the original, biological meaning of metamorphosis, i.e. the transformation from an immature stage to an adult stage, is played out and, most astonishingly, suspended for a time and even reversed. A liberating act. 

 

For additional images and information, please contact: press@antonkerngallery.com.

 

Gronemeyer studied at HfbK University of Fine Arts in Hamburg. She taught at Goldsmiths College and Chelsea College of Art in London. Since 2017, she has been teaching at the Art Academy in Düsseldorf. Her work has been presented in solo exhibitions in galleries throughout Europe as well as in New York and Chicago and was included in groups shows at Kunstverein Harburg (2019), Museum Ludwig Forum Aachen (2016), Kunsthalle Bern (2015), ICA London (2014), Kunstwerke Berlin (2013), Portikus Frankfurt, and Deichtorhallen Hamburg (both 2011). Currently her work is included in the exhibition Andante Remix, at LinseedArt Projects, Shanghai. Gronemeyer lives in Berlin, Germany. 

 

On the occasion of this exhibition, a new monograph entitled Ellen Gronemeyer: Tausendmal Du will be published by Bierke publishing in Berlin, including essays by Vanessa Müller, Daniela Dröscher and Christoph Gerozissis.

Download Press Release
Installation Views
  • Person walking through exhibition.
  • Installation view with two works.
  • Installation view with a lot of works.
  • Installation view of corner, featuring three works.
  • Installation view of three works in the corner of the exhibition.
  • Installation view in hallway of exhibition.
  • Installation view of two works, including flabbergasted.
  • Installation view of a few works in the show, including slapback.
  • Two paintings, including large mermaid work.
  • Two works by the elevator.
  • Three self portrait works in the exhibition.
Works
  • Ellen Gronemeyer pardon screen, 2021
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    pardon screen, 2021
  • Ellen Gronemeyer Geocenter, 2021
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    Geocenter, 2021
  • Ellen Gronemeyer the voice, 2021
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    the voice, 2021
  • Ellen Gronemeyer upfield, 2021
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    upfield, 2021
  • Ellen Gronemeyer silent picture, 2021
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    silent picture, 2021
  • Ellen Gronemeyer kaleidoscope eyes, 2021
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    kaleidoscope eyes, 2021
  • Ellen Gronemeyer elastic, 2021
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    elastic, 2021
  • Ellen Gronemeyer straight puddle, 2021
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    straight puddle, 2021
  • Ellen Gronemeyer Cosmopolitan, 2021
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    Cosmopolitan, 2021
  • Ellen Gronemeyer slap back, 2021
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    slap back, 2021
  • Ellen Gronemeyer crosshair, 2021
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    crosshair, 2021
  • Ellen Gronemeyer birdingplace, 2021
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    birdingplace, 2021
  • Ellen Gronemeyer Space echo, 2021
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    Space echo, 2021
  • Ellen Gronemeyer Highway, 2020
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    Highway, 2020
  • Ellen Gronemeyer candle in the wind, 2021
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    candle in the wind, 2021
  • Ellen Gronemeyer flabbergasted, 2021
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    flabbergasted, 2021
  • Ellen Gronemeyer crapheap, 2020
    Ellen Gronemeyer
    crapheap, 2020
Publications
  • Ellen Gronemeyer

    Ellen Gronemeyer

    Tausendmal Du... 2021
    Hardcover 103 pages
    Publisher: Bierke
    ISBN: 978-3-948546-04-5
    Dimensions: 12.5 in x 10.5 in
    Read more

Related artist

  • Ellen Gronemeyer

    Ellen Gronemeyer

Back to exhibitions

ANTON KERN GALLERY

16 East 55th Street

New York, NY 10022

 

Hours:

Tuesday - Saturday: 10am - 6pm

 

 

 

 

T  212.367.9663

F  212.367.8135 

 

 

 

 

   

WINDOW, on view 24/7
91 Walker Street (corner of Walker and Lafayette Street)

General Inquiries:
info@antonkerngallery.com

 

Press Inquiries:
press@antonkerngallery.com

Go
Instagram, opens in a new tab.
Tiktok, opens in a new tab.
Join the mailing list
Manage cookies
Copyright © 2025 Anton Kern Gallery
Site by Artlogic

This website uses cookies
This site uses cookies to help make it more useful to you. Please contact us to find out more about our Cookie Policy.

Manage cookies
Accept

Cookie preferences

Check the boxes for the cookie categories you allow our site to use

Cookie options
Required for the website to function and cannot be disabled.
Improve your experience on the website by storing choices you make about how it should function.
Allow us to collect anonymous usage data in order to improve the experience on our website.
Allow us to identify our visitors so that we can offer personalised, targeted marketing.
Save preferences