
Shortlist exhibition for the Preis der Nationalgalerie
Berlin
Type
Preis der Nationalgalerie 2019
Shortlist exhibition of the Preis der Nationalgalerie 2019
In March 2019, Pauline Curnier Jardin (born 1980 in Marseille), Simon Fujiwara (born 1982 in London), Flaka Haliti (born 1982 in Pristina) and Katja Novitskova (born 1984 in Tallinn) have been nominated for the Preis der Nationalgalerie 2019 by an international jury. The museum prize is awarded every two years and pays tribute to artists under 40 who live and work in Germany. The four artists will be presented in a joint exhibition at the Hamburger Bahnhof – Museum für Gegenwart – Berlin from August 16, 2019 to February 16, 2020. All four artists show spatial ensembles in which they combine existing and new works. The tonality and handwriting of the four spatial work presentations is very different; what they have in common is an explicit reference to aspects of our contemporary European society.
Pauline Curnier Jardin
With her transgressive artistic approach, which combines visual and narrative elements of theatre and cinema, Pauline Curnier Jardin creates a stage space. In this walk-in installation, cinematic and sculptural work intermesh in Curnier Jardin’s characteristic manner. Her composition of the two films Explosion Ma Baby (2016) and the new production Qu'un Sang Impure as well as the sculptural work Peaux de Dame in the Hot Flashes Forrest (2019) create a wild web around desire and reproduction.
Simon Fujiwara
In the shortlist exhibition, Simon Fujiwara presents a compilation of four works that stem from his investigation of contemporary mass phenomena and their economic, socio-political, and media aspects. The very different works illustrate the extent to which these phenomena have an emotional component of their own. The video installation Likeness (2018) focuses on the figure of Anne Frank and her media-effective staging and instrumentalization.
Flaka Haliti
Flaka Haliti continues her two series Its urgency got lost in reverse (while being in constant delay) and Is it you, Joe? for the exhibition. Two colorful idle robots, composed of materials from abandoned KFOR field camps in Kosovo – the discarded pieces of a peace process – are juxtaposed by the artist with the transformable figure of Joe, who has accompanied her since 2015 as a difficult to grasp alter ego. In the staging that shapes the entire space, the two groups of works are just as much interlocked as they rub against each other.
Katja Novitskova
Katja Novitskova became known as one of the pioneers of an artistic language called "Post-Internet Art". For the shortlist exhibition, she creates a virtuoso, multi-part and multi-layered "environment" of sculptural elements, murals and projections of various kinds. Here, too, the works in the overall installation form a common, closely interlocking structure. The works are based on Novitskova's interest in current research in biotechnology and revolve around the question of the future existence of the organic as a component of technological processes.
Jury and Award
An international jury chose the prizewinner on September 12, 2019: Pauline Curnier Jardin. The award consists of a solo exhibition with a catalogue at Hamburger Bahnhof – Museum für Gegenwart – Berlin in the fall of 2020.
The jury consisted of: Annie Fletcher (Director of IMMA – Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin), Anna-Catharina Gebbers (Curator at Hamburger Bahnhof – Museum für Gegenwart – Berlin. Staatliche Museen zu Berlin), Udo Kittelmann (Director of Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin), Philippe Vergne (Director of Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art, Porto) and Theodora Vischer (Senior Curator of Fondation Beyeler, Basel).
Pattern of Activation (Mutants)
A group of large sculptures depict various stages of embryonic development of C. elegans worm. It is a model organism commonly used in bio-medical research due to their kinship to human and the "simplicity"of their body structures. They are the first species whose genome was fully sequenced and whose neutral network was fully mapped. Their bodies are often modified so that they light up with fluorescent colours in order to make the test results easier to observe. Their image could be a monument to the contemporary "colonial"expansion that is not geographical (as applied to people and territories) but rather biological: genomes, molecular structures, neuron firings, embryogenesis, and other inner workings of human and nonhuman life. The frontier logic comes with the requirement for extensive mapping, and that means a colossal amount of pattern processing, a lot of it in the form of images of living things.

Earthware 2018.11.29
UV printer ink epoxy clay nail polish 121 x 161 x 3 cm 47 10/16 x 63 6/16 x 1 2/16 ins Unique Courtesy the artist; Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler, Berlin

Earthware 06.13.2017
UV printer ink epoxy clay nail polish 121 x 161 x 3 cm 47 10/16 x 63 6/16 x 1 2/16 ins Unique Courtesy the artist

Earthware 2015.11.23
UV printer ink, epoxy clay, nail polish Unique 121 x 161 x 3 cm 47 10/16 x 63 6/16 x 1 2/16 in Courtesy the artist; Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler, Berlin

Earthware 01.13.2018
UV printer ink, epoxy clay, nail polish Unique 121 x 161 x 3 cm 47 10/16 x 63 6/16 x 1 2/16 in Courtesy the artist; Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler, Berlin

Earthware 11.22.2018
UV printer ink, epoxy clay, nail polish Unique 121 x 161 x 3 cm 47 10/16 x 63 6/16 x 1 2/16 in Courtesy the artist; Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler, Berlin

Wild type, mutant
Digital print, polyurethane resin, rotating ceiling hook 100 x 120 x 0.5 cm Unique Courtesy of the artist; Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler, Berlin

Start, bias encoded, finish
Digital print, polyurethane resin, rotating ceiling hook 70 x 154 x 0.5 cm Unique Courtesy of the artist; Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler, Berlin

Though it lacks eyes, it can still see light
Digital print, polyurethane resin, rotating ceiling hook 75 x 135 x 0.5 cm Unique Courtesy of the artist; Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler, Berlin
Mania Phase
Digital print, polyurethane resin, rotating ceiling hook 140 x 80 x 0.5 cm Unique Courtesy of the artist; Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler, Berlin

Pattern of Activation (Mamaroo nursery, dawn chorus)
This large installation features a group of six robotic-looking sculptures, a video projection and a sound installation. The sculptures gently move and buzz in front of what appears to be a simple PowerPoint slideshow, their bodies all connected to the power source through what look like long intestinal cords. They are, in fact, repurposed Mamaroo electronic baby swings from the popular brand 4Moms. Despite the fact that they hold things like ruptured birth sacks, the babies they were supposed to be carrying are nowhere to be found. Any elements that might signal their original function are missing: they are decorated in synthetic and organic materials like transparent polyurethane shapes with images of CTI brain scans and protein models, robotic crabs, silicon fish baits, tree fungi, etc. Some of their laser eyes are directed at the projection, whilw others look out into the exhinition space.
