Andréhn-Schiptjenko is delighted to participate to this year’s edition of Art Basel. We hope to see you in Hall 2.1, Booth R15 where we will exhibit a historic presentation of Uta Barth’s photography, dating from the 90s and moving forward, together with an entirely new, large-scale sculpture group by Xavier Veilhan and premier new paintings by Kristina Jansson - making it her debut at Art Basel. We will also present new and historic works by Julio Le Parc, one of the central figures in the Op-art movement.
Uta Barth, b. 1958, DE. Lives and works in Los Angeles, USA.
Uta Barth has over the past four decades come to occupy a truly singular position in contemporary photography. Her work has been the subject of numerous, institutional exhibitions, most recently the large retrospective Peripheral Vision at the Getty Center in Los Angeles.
Having made visual perception itself the subject of her photographic work Barth’s images may appear empty as they, with blurred backgrounds and cropped frames, capture incidental and ephemeral moments. Using the camera as a metaphor for the eye, and by deconstructing the conventions of visual representation, she draws attention to the periphery and to the limits of human vision. Her images trace light, time and optical afterimages, and they aim to ask us to become invested and conscious of our own perceptual awareness.
Kristina Jansson, b. 1967, SWE. Lives and works in Stockholm, Sweden.
Kristina Jansson is regarded as one of the most influential and important painters in Sweden. Her grand and ambiguous works often deal with the images’ emblematic relationship to human undercurrents and desires, such as money, power and lust. The importance of the narratives displayed in the paintings diminishes though along with the work process and becomes equalized with the materiality of the painting. For Jansson a painting is never only an image but rather the friction between image and material. A painting refers to something illustrative, but in fact the subversive and sensual properties of the material create a barrier between the obvious and the unknown. Whatever it wants to depict will remain a jumble between image and the way the material transmits its content.
Jansson is represented in several Swedish museum collections, among them the Modern Museum of Art in Stockholm and in the autumn of 2022 an extensive catalogue was published on her work.
Julio Le Parc, b. 1928, ARG. Lives and works in Cachan, France.
Julio Le Parc is one of the leading figures in the Op-art movement. The concern for how art might stimulate the active participation of the public has always been central to his œuvre. Nothing is to hinder the viewer from experiencing the power of his artworks; no art historical references, symbolism or other kind of previous knowledge is necessary. Le Parc’s quest for accessibility is directly linked to his experimentations on geometric abstraction, optokinetic forms and perception: experiments whereby he manipulates chromatic color palettes, negative space and the interplay of light and shadow - creating compositions that combine a distinct intensity with a subtle expression of continuous movement.
During his extended career, Le Parc has been widely exhibited around the world. He represented Argentina at the 1966 Venice Biennale, where he was awarded the Grand International Prize for Painting.
Xavier Veilhan, b. 1963, FR. Lives and works in Paris, France.
Veilhan’s work is multi-faceted; encompassing sculpture, installation, painting, photography as well as hybrids of all of these, and he is also engaged in performance work and filmmaking. He plays with the notions of the generic, of the industrially produced object and of universal representation, creating objects at once ambivalent and stark. Concerned with the scenography of a dedicated presentation, Veilhan addresses issues of perception as well as the physical and temporal relationships created within the context of the exhibition format. For our presentation at Art Basel, we will present an entirely new, large-scale sculpture group as well as Renzo, a bust in mineral mortar and part of the artist’s ongoing homage to architects.
Cajsa von Zeipel, b. 1983, SWE.
Lives and works in New York, USA. Cajsa von Zeipel is a sculptor whose work delves into identity, gender, queerness and normativity, using tension between traditionally feminine and masculine tropes to challenge our notions of womanhood and sexuality. Her aesthetic that may seem both hyperbolic and dystopian is in fact a comment and a visualisation of the continuous interaction of technology with biology, with the human body at the very centre. Canon (Goldie) is von Zeipel’s largest bronze work to date and will be presented at Art Basel. Like her recent works, it examines the subject of the post-human body, a body that is used and optimised rather than lived, a human industry of sorts.
Recent institutional exhibitions include Rubell Museum, Miami and Washington DC, USA (2021-2022); Museum of Sex, New York, USA (2022); ARKEN Museum for Moderne Kunst, Copenhagen, Denmark (2021); ECLIPSE, 7th Athens Biennale, Greece (2021); Baroque Topologies, KV Leipzig, Germany (2020); Journey Through a Body, Kunsthalle Düsseldorf, Germany (2020) and Art of Sport, Copenhagen Contemporary, Denmark (2020).