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NoguerasBlanchard
is pleased to announce its first exhibition of Paul Ekaitz (Barcelona,
1977). Of Basque and German origin, Ekaitz presents a new project
which he began working on three years ago when he moved to Berlin.
Hinterhof, which means courtyard in German, is a work in progress
formed by installation, photography and video, and which explores
concepts of time, space and perception.
The central piece
of Hinterhof is a large scale model placed directly on the gallery
floor. This impossible architectural construction is formed by 21
modules which represent the interiors of houses of friends
of the artist in Berlin. The artist draws the plans from memory
and personalizes the colour of the walls with intense colours. Hinterhof
emerges from a daily process of observation, interaction and union
and
almost as an answer to absorb a new urban entity such as Berlin.
The chaos visualized in the structure reflects for instance the
local codes imposed by a new culture, which are read through a series
of filters
rather than instinctively.
The photographs
in the exhibition are an invitation to enter those intimate spaces,
now emtpy and uninhabited, that suggest something that is absent
or a memory of past events. A journey through winding rooms and
corridors bathed with a natural light where the abscence of that
which happened between the walls is revealed more explicitely than
the spaces themselves.
The wallpaper covering the back wall of the gallery depicts a room
with a spectacular panoramic mountain view covering one of the walls.
The work is titled Möseler, which is the artist´s father´s surname
and also the name of a mountain in Germany. The artist leans on
a walking stick and looks towards the horizon, recalling the romantic
paintings of Caspar David Friedrich or the realist Gustave Coubet.
Hinterhof explores the basis of our relationship with oursurroundings.
Through a dialectical approach to interior/exterior, Ekaitz seeks
to illustrate a metaphor for the vital experience or social structre
or any circumstance.
Paul Ekaitz’s work has been exhibited in the Muestra de Arte Injuve,
Círculo de Bellas Artes, Madrid (2002) and in the Sala Metronom,
Barcelona (2001).
He currently lives and works in Berlin.
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