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CARSTEN HÖLLER, Zukunft ist wichtiger als Freizeit., 1989


Photo K. van Gelder

CARSTEN HÖLLER, Zukunft ist wichtiger als Freizeit., 1989
5,4 x 4,9 x 0,6 cm
2 match books, vintage colour photo (8,8 x 13,1 cm)
edition 5000
hand out, published by the artist
mint condition
each € 130,- plus € 15,- Track & Trace EU registered mail
inv.CHoe 249

Carsten Höller was flabbergasted by Helmut Kohl’s speech at the Deutschen Ingenieurtag on 26th of May 1987 given in Munich, Germany: “…Wer über die Zukunft unserer Gesellschaft mitentscheiden will, tut gut daran, dies nicht nur in der unbeständigen Aufgeregtheit des Zeitgeistes zu tun, sondern mit Nachdenklichkeit und Besonnenheit.”

“…Einer Gesellschaft, in der für viele die Freizeit immer mehr zum wichtigsten Wert wird, ist schwer verständlich zu machen, dass Zukunft wichtiger ist als Freizeit und dass Zukunft ohne Anstrengungen nicht gesichert werden kann.”

The idea that a future with efforts or even hard labour, i.e. ‘Anstrengungen’, is more important than leasure time made the artist decide to appropriate the slogan of German politician Helmut Kohl.

SIGMAR POLKE, Ohne Titel, 1989 [‘splash’ screen print]

SIGMAR POLKE, Untitled, 1989
98,5 x 69 cm / 38.5 x 27 inches
screen print on Schoellershammer 250 grams/m²
signed, edition 940
excellent condition
published by Griffelkunst Vereinigung, Hamburg, Germany
€ 1.000,- plus € 24,- Track & Trace EU registered mail
inv.SPol 000-pr

Sigmar Polke was the practicioner of large-scale works whose interest in cartoon and mass media was once called Capitalist Realism in Germany, and whose intensely varied marks yielded a lifelong inventiveness with form, media and chance.

The screen print edition Untitled 1989 of the Griffelkunst Vereinigung is part of the MoMA Print Collection, New York, USA.

History of prices:
Grisebach Auktionen, Berlin, Germany 18 August 2023 € 1.143,-
Nosbüsh & Stucke, Berlin, Germany 13 May 2023 € 800,- (hammer price)
1st Dibs, Hamburg, Germany, May 2022 € 3.400,-
Van Ham Kunstauktionen, Cologne, Germany, 6 February 2020 € 1.000,- (hammer price)
Jetschke-Van Vliet, Berlin, Germany, November 2020 € 900,- (hammer price)

GERHARD RICHTER, Kerze [1988] – Goslar

GERHARD RICHTER, ‘Kerze’, n.d. [1988 Goslar Kerze]
89,5 x 94,5 cm / 35.2 x 37.2 inches offset
signed, edition 250
published by Verein zur Förderung moderner Kunst / Mönchehaus-Museum für moderne Kunst, Goslar, Germany
sold

still available: signed poster with text in very attractive high quality frame. Ref. Goslar Kerze, text, framed

Gerhard Richter’s Goslar Kerze is a reproduction of a painting called “Kerze” (1982), although image mirrored. Originally this motiv was used for a poster designed by the artist announcing his solo exhibition in Mönchehaus-Museum für moderne Kunst in Goslar in 1988.

 

 

In 2004 Süddeutsche.de Neueste Nachrichten announced a sudden appearance of Gerhard Richter’s ‘Kerze’ signed with the names Joseph Beuys and Georg Baselitz. “At that time I signed for fun also with Beuys and Baselitz”. This was not done as a provocation, but more in a spirit of “foolhardiness”.

 


Gerhard Richter signed with ‘Beuys’ and ‘Baselitz’.

The painter Gerhard Richter said he signed with names such as Beuys and Baselitz on early offset prints ‘just for fun’. He confessed this in the latest edition of “Monopol” magazine, published by Florian Illies. In 1988 Gerhard Richter signed 250 copies of his offset print ‘Kerze I’ at a price of 50 marks each, on behalf of the ‘Verein zur Förderung moderner Kunst’ in Goslar.
A few prints now popped up that show a completely different signature. Richter, who is now considered the most expensive German artist alive, said: ‘Back then I also signed with Beuys and Baselitz on them, out of burlesqueness.’ This was not a provocation, it was more “overconfidence”

Richter’s modest comment on “Kerze I” that was sold at Sotheby’s in New York last May for $ 26,400: ‘Of course, $ 26,000 is at least $ 25,000 too much.’

Süddeutsche Zeitung, 29.09.2004

 

 

History of prices:
Mönchehaus-Museum für moderne Kunst, Goslar, Germany    DM 800,- December 1988
Auction House Ketterer Kunst, Munich, Germany       € 7.500,- November 2011

JOHN M ARMLEDER, Untitled [flag], 1988

untitled, 1988
200 x 300 cm
polyester flag
edition of 10

Published by Gran Pavese, The Hague (?), Netherlands

John M Armleder has worked for more than thirty years, starting off in the 1960s as a performance artist in the Fluxus inspired Geneva group Ecart (trans. French for ‘diversion’). Rather than work out of a studio, he travels, using galleries as studio spaces, working up shows in response to particular spaces, opportunities, possibilities. Here a flag of dots was made for a flag project in The Netherlands in 1988.

ROB SCHOLTE, Mens erger je niet! / Ne l’en fais pas!, 1988

ROB SCHOLTE, Mens erger je niet! / Ne l’en fais pas!, 1988
300 x 200 cm
hand knotted carpet with white tassels
signed, numbered and dated on linen cloth
edition 15
mint
published by Equador Production, Brussels, Belgium
€ 9.500,-
inv.RSchol 394-pr

RScholte1988-carpet.mensergerjeniet_certificate600

 

history
Installation of this carpet (version with black tassels) at Ranbir Singh/Petra Grunert’s home in Brussels, Belgium, in 1990
RS1988carpetMensergerjeniet500