Tobias Rehberger (born June 2, 1966) is a German sculptor, born in Esslingen am Neckar.[1] He studied under Thomas Bayrle and Martin Kippenberger at the Stadelschule in Frankfurt am Main, where he now teaches.
Work
editRehberger works in the wider sphere of design and architecture, and his art is difficult to categorize. He has created an idyllic Japanese garden in the middle of Manhattan; Pop-inspired wallpaper consisting of photographs of his organs; a series of Modernist-looking treehouses in a park in northern Germany; and an enormous tanker based on a crude boat that the father of a friend built to escape from Vietnam.[2]
For his art-car series, a project that he began in 1999, Rehberger sent simple sketches, composed essentially from memory, of a Porsche 911 and a McLaren F1 to a manufacturer in Thailand. There were no measurements or schematics included. The only parameters were that the cars had to be driveable and built to human scale.[3]
Rehberger also spent some time in Cameroon, where he provided native crafts workers with his crude drawings of well-known modernist chairs and asked them to recreate the designs. The results were filled with cultural misreadings: Alvar Aalto's classic three-legged stool, for instance, was given an extra leg for stability.[4]
On the east side of Madison Square Park in New York, Rehberger in 2001 created Tsutsumu, an elegant Japanese garden made up of a large bonsai tree, a bench and a rock. Early in the morning, even on sweltering August days, the Public Art Fund sprayed the garden with four inches of man-made snow.[5]
Rehberger received the Golden Lion award for best artist at the 2009 Venice Biennale.[6] In December 2011, he unveiled his public sculpture Obstinate Lighthouse, commissioned by the City of Miami Beach. In 2012, he was commissioned to design a 700 square feet (65 square metres) project space in the Leeum, Samsung Museum of Art in Seoul, Korea.[7] Rehberger designed an exclusive collection of purses and bags for the German fashion label MCM in 2016.[6]
In 2013, Riley claimed that a wall-sized, black-and-white checkerboard work by Tobias Rehberger plagiarised her painting Movement in Squares and asked for it to be removed from display at the Berlin State Library's reading room.
Tobias Rehberger is represented by neugerriemschneider in Berlin.
Exhibitions (selection)
edit- Kunsthalle Basel 1998
- Moderna Museet, Stockholm, 1998
- Sprengel Museum, Hannover 1998
- Geläut – bis ich's hör ..., Museum für Neue Kunst, Karlsruhe, 2002
- Bitte ... danke, Galerie der Stadt Stuttgart, 2003/2004
- Private matters Whitechapel Gallery, London, 2004
- Cancelled projects, Museum Fridericianum, Cassel, 1995
- Home and away and outside installation, Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt, 2014[8]
- New York Bar Oppenheimer, Hotel Americano, New York, 2013[9]
- Dazzle Ship London, HMS President, London, 2014[10][11]
Recognition
edit- Förderpreis des Internationalen Kunstpreises of Baden-Württemberg Landes, 1999
- Ten-Preis 2001
- Karl-Ströher-Preis 2003
- Golden Lion for Best Artist that responded to the 2009 theme "Fare Mondi // Making Worlds" Venice Biennale
Notes and references
edit- ^ Tobias Rehberger Bio, artnet Database.
- ^ Maura Egan (October 8, 2006), The Provocateur T: The New York Times Style Magazine.
- ^ Maura Egan (October 8, 2006), The Provocateur T: The New York Times Style Magazine.
- ^ Andrea Codrington (January 15, 1998), Public Eye New York Times.
- ^ Carol Vogel (May 25, 2001), Art in the Park New York Times.
- ^ a b Williams, Maxwell (June–July 2016). "Razzle Dazzle: Sculptor Tobias Rehberger teams with MCM on a striking bag collection". W. 45 (5). Condé Nast: 64.
- ^ Tobias Rehberger: ‘ sex and friends’, January 13 – February 16, 2012 Pilar Corrias, London.
- ^ Frankfurt show review, The Guardian
- ^ Tobias Rehberger's NY Bar Oppenheimer, Dezeen Magazine.
- ^ "DAZZLE SHIP – LONDON". 14-18 NOW. Retrieved June 25, 2015.
- ^ "Artist Tobias Rehberger docks his 'dazzle' warship on London's River Thames". wallpaper.com. Retrieved June 25, 2015.
Further reading
edit- Grosenick, Uta; Riemschneider, Burkhard, eds. (2005). Art Now (25th anniversary ed.). Köln: Taschen. pp. 260–263. ISBN 9783822840931. OCLC 191239335.