Pamela Rosenkranz
For the past decade, Pamela Rosenkranz (born 1979 in Sils-Maria, lives and works in Berlin) has sought to collapse the meaning of the artwork into the
meaninglessness of pure materiality. In challenging these conditions of
art, she activates a contemporary form of nihilism. From paintings
produced from the foil of emergency blankets or Ralph Lauren-branded
latex paint and soft drinks, to plastic water bottles filled with skin- or
urine-hued liquids, to a monitor featuring an approximation of and
challenge to Yves Klein blue, Rosenkranz's artworks take aim at the
empty centers of history, politics, and our contemporary culture as a
whole. Her adept engagement with the homogenous surfaces of our
consumerist societies reveals them to be not just objects of desire but
parts of a natural order. In so doing, and by unraveling mystified
notions of art that has as its core the artist's subjectivity, Rosenkranz
incorporates questions about a “self” that insistently appears to be at
the absolute center of cultural attention.
2021
bilingual edition (English / German)
Mousse - Mousse Publishing (books)
New monograph.
2012
English edition
JRP|Editions - Monographs
First monograph.