ITEM # 1

July 1st, 2008

Or: My first art

I bought art! To be honest, I bought it last week and apart from a little twitter note, I haven’t told anyone, yet. Why not? Hard to tell, probably because I don’t have the art at home yet. And this is a very unnerving situation.

Let’s start here: At the opening of “D.O.A. – Dreaming of Africa” (I wrote about that earlier) I talked to the curator Philipp Ziegler (who also works at Galerie Reinhard Hauff in Stuttgart, link) about me becoming a collector. Since we have seen each other at previous openings, you could say that he has an idea of what I like and why.

So when I asked him if he could recommend something to me, he immediately mentioned a specific work by Lasse Schmidt Hansen (link). I had come in contact with the work of Lasse a while back, at the very first opening at the Dorten Haus (link). Lasse had installed standard neon lights in our irregularly shaped space (see image below). I immediately liked the way Lasse approached standards and norms. What comes to mind is his having a carpet cut to the measurements on the ground plan of a room and then putting the carpet in that room. Just to realize that it doesn’t fit at all!

And now Philipp was to recommend some works by Lasse Schmidt Hansen for me to buy.

I went over to the gallery a week later and having finally found it some flights of stairs up in the back of the building (for an outside view, see the image below), I first had a look at the current exhibition “Botox to Go” by Frank Ahlgrimm (link).

Philipp told me some very interesting stories and one sentence stuck especially well: “Collecting starts where your own four walls stop.” As long as you can fit the art in your condo, you’re still decorating, in other words. So hey, I advanced rapidly from “nothing” to “home decorator” now. Still a long way to being a collector …

Anyway, back to the art I bought. Philipp showed me parts of Lasse’s edition x/°°. A series of A3 photocopies. Lasse printed an online version of one of Thomas Ruff’s “Star Series” (at least that’s what I think it was, link) and cut out the stars. Now he can sprinkle them onto a photocopier and thus creates star maps by photocopying the stars with the lid open (See how it was exhibited below).

The edition is called x/°° because the edition is infinite. He can always do it again and the outcome will be different. I bought the numbers 11 and 13, because they seem to belong together, the way the stars fell on them. What’s more, they’re prime numbers and they link my collecting passion with another passion I have: science fiction literature and vintage non-fiction books about space.

Here is how they were laid out and how I decided on them. Mine are the two on the right:

Philipp himself bought two of them and he’s having them framed now. I’ll wait to see how they turn to decide if I want mine to be framed in the same way. So it could be weeks before I actually have the first of my art in my own hands.

3 Responses to “ITEM # 1”

  1. M.Stankewitz Says:

    Congratulations to your start in the world of collecting art ! Do I get it right that you purchased a set of A3 photocopies ? A rather unsettling idea from my fairly conservative perspective (depends of course a lot on the size of investment involved).
    Collecting art is always a thrilling activity. There is nothing that compares to the excitement before the buying and afterwards. Purchasing a piece of art is a REAL statement and it changes everything.

    Good luck and success with this blog and independent collectors. It will be interesting to see how things develop.

  2. Tommi Brem Says:

    Hey M.!

    Thank’s for your comment. “… that you purchased a set of A3 photocopies?” Yes, you could see it that way. For me, however, the photocopies are a manifestation of a concept. Of an idea that I like very much because it’s connected to me and my world, yet fresh and something I have not come up with. You could say that Lasse has become a “universe maker”. Who can say that of himself? And who knows, maybe with each photocopy Lasse makes, a part of our universe changes to that photocopy? Or maybe a new one is created? If you are up for the theory of parallel universes, this is something the works can make you think about.

    That’s what I think I bought: The idea, the manifestation and the inspiration.

  3. Pieter Says:

    My first piece of art was a female nude painting.

    Your taste is much more pioneering.

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