Martin Arnold
Manon de Boer
Benjamin Butler
Adriana Czernin
Svenja Deininger
Milena Dragicevic
Werner Feiersinger
Giuseppe Gabellone
Christine & Irene Hohenbüchler
Christian Hutzinger
Carsten Höller
Raoul de Keyser
Jakob Kolding
Július Koller
Jan Merta
Roman Ondak
Peter Pommerer
Allen Ruppersberg
Joe Scanlan
Ene-Liis Semper
Roman Signer
Adrien Tirtiaux
Johannes Vogl
Maja Vukoje
Corinne Wasmuht
Donelle Woolford
Sharon Ya'ari
Jun Yang
Jakub Julian Ziolkowski
Gregor Zivic
| Corinne Wasmuth's pictures take one's breath away. They possess, in an utterly concrete and physical sense, an insistent plenitude and presence. Everything which defines the particular nature of this manner of painting is at the same time extremely distinct and ultimately intangible. These pictorial worlds are poised upon the narrow ridge between inviting visuality and forbidding refusal; they combine suggestivity, potency and mysteriousness into one. They draw back from unambiguous categorizations to the same extent as they reject the impulse to yield up the secrets of their complex and engaging pictorial inventions all too quickly and unreservedly.
With regard to the works of recent years, however, the viewer has more difficulty than ever in holding his ground in response to these overwhelming amount of visual input. This group of works, already begun with the pictures Pathfinder (2000) or Gewalt (Violence, 2001), has in the meantime grown to scarcely more than a dozen pictures, inasmuch as Wasmuth sometimes works several months upon one single picture. The works are supported by a fascinating painterly elan: it is a matter of velocity and spatiality, of the subject and its disappearance, of the endeavor to grasp the momentary preception before it is covered over by the next sense impression. The painterly strategy of Corinne Wasmuth seems in these new works to invent itself anew; or to put it more aptly, a fully new pictorial grammar is developed on the basis of fundemental coordinates which themselves remain the same.
Martin Engler, Corinne Wasmuth - On Motifs and Spaces; in: CW Katalog, Kunstverein Hannover, 20006, p. 18 |