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Tim Eitel

Untitled (Interior)

Past
Nov 25, 2020 – Jan 30, 2021
Seoul

Untitled (Interior) takes Tim Eitel’s psychological portraits into the space of the modern art museum. His painted portrayals of lone figures in arts venues turn our vision toward human interiority itself.

Exhibition Details

Tim Eitel
Untitled (Interior)
Nov 25 – Jan 30, 2020

Gallery

Itaewon-ro 262
Yongsan-gu
Seoul

Above: Installation view, Tim Eitel: Untitled (Interior), November 25, 2020 – January 30, 2021, Pace Gallery, Seoul © Tim Eitel

Pace is pleased to present Untitled (Interior), an exhibition of new and recent oil paintings and watercolors by leading German contemporary painter Tim Eitel. Eitel is celebrated for his open-ended pieces that mirror or reframe our reality to invite considerations of individual and collective perception. His depictions of isolated figures in contemporary public spaces are, on one hand, subjective windows onto our own experience, and, on the other, objective scenes relayed through overt compositional or formal conceits such as the modernist grid: another kind of window.

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Installation view, Tim Eitel: Untitled (Interior), November 25, 2020 – January 30, 2021, Pace Gallery, Seoul © Tim Eitel

Expanding upon themes of partition and connection present in recent solo exhibitions including tim eitel_untitled (2001-2020) at the Daegu Art Museum in South Korea, Tim Eitel: Sites and Attitudes at Pace in Beijing, and Tim Eitel: Open Walls at Museum der bildenden Künste in Leipzig, Germany, Untitled (Interior) takes Eitel’s psychological portraits into the space of the modern art museum. His painted portrayals of lone figures in arts venues turn our vision toward human interiority itself. The show will run from November 25, 2020 to January 30, 2021 at Pace in Seoul.

Eitel, who works in Paris, rose to acclaim as a member of the New Leipzig School, a group of figurative painters including Neo Rauch and Matthias Weischer that coalesced at the Leipzig Academy of Fine Arts in post-reunification Germany. After studying painting under Arno Rink, Eitel moved to Berlin and co-founded the cooperative gallery Liga in 2002, cementing the prominence of the group globally. For the past two decades, the artist has culled and simplified elements from a rich repository of photographs and memories to formulate his atmospheric paintings. Methodically layered and meticulously composed, his work is a matter of utmost precision.

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Tim Eitel, Packing/Unpacking, 2020, oil on wood panel, 10-5/8" × 8-11/16" × 1-3/16" (27 cm × 22.1 cm × 3 cm) © Tim Eitel / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn

The works in Untitled (Interior), all made in 2020, take place in an unspecific modern art museum painted using flat planes of pure color and horizontal and vertical lines that abut, intersect with, layer, and mirror one another. The result, which approaches abstraction, is a dreamscape that recalls the lived experience of being in arts spaces, by virtue of its photorealist elements, but is distinct from it, in terms of its emptying or vacating of the space, which places emphasis on perception and reflection as phenomena. Unnecessary details that might tip these paintings too far toward narrative specificity are pared back to direct the viewer’s attention to the theaters of contemplation in which art is housed, spaces dedicated not only to the objects of our gaze, but at the same time to the act of gazing itself, movement in thought and attention in between stimulus and events.

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Tim Eitel, Interior (Ghost), 2020, oil on canvas, 74-13/16" × 59-1/16" × 1-9/16" (190 cm × 150 cm × 4 cm) © Tim Eitel / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn

The works on view range in size from Packing/Unpacking, an intimately scaled image of an art handler kneeling before the back of a stretched canvas, to Interior (Ghost), which measures over six feet or nearly two meters in height and depicts a phantom imprint of a man walking through an art museum, viewed through a large, gridded window. The individuals in these images are unreachable. Seen from behind or from the side, they deflect the viewer’s gaze and conjure up a sense of alienation or strangeness in a simulacrum of reality. The artworks that the figures behold, too, are inaccessible to us as viewers: we observe these artworks from the back, or blotted out by the glare of the sun, or, as in Interior (Shadow) and Interior (Passage), just beyond our field of vision. As we mentally follow the museumgoer through painted space, it is in fact that suggestion of time as also evidenced by the attention Eitel commands to the quality of surfaces and scenes he constructs, that leads to an open ended proposal for the relevance of signifiers as a counterpoint to the aesthetic material qualities innate to environment, as drivers of the understanding of these interior spaces depicted if not our individual perspective.

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Tim Eitel

Tim Eitel conveys a deep command of color, technique, and form in his figurative paintings inspired by his observations of contemporary life and art history.

He studied at the Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst in Leipzig from 1997 to 2001 and was a Meisterschüler (Master Student) of Professor Arno Rink from 2001 through 2003. He has received a number of prestigious awards throughout his career, including the Landesgraduiertenstipendium, Saxonia, Germany (2002) and the Marion Ermer Preis (2003). Cofounder of the collective Galerie LIGA in Berlin, he was one of the leading protagonists of the New Leipzig School before gaining a reputation as one of the most important painters of his generation.

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