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Lun Tuchnowski
Bronze Age
1 November - 20 December 2007
An important new exhibition of the distinguished German
sculptor, Lun Tuchnowski, opens in London on 1st November. The exhibition
will show a selection of his work of the past five years, the latest
of which are a powerful group of sculptures that developed from a wax
cast of his own skull. A series of 15 life-size pieces show how Tuchnowski
is able to turn this simple shape into myriad different forms that recall
the Victorian phrenological maps of the head.
The head or helmet sculptures are shown in the context of two monumental
bronze and fibreglass sculptures. These grew from his interest in the
ancient Chinese “pi” discs. Normally made from jade these
intricately carved circular rings or “pi” discs were funery
objects placed on all the body openings as well as the head in burials
as symbols of heaven to assist the passage of the spirit there. For Tuchnowski
the disc is an exquisite sculptural form that activates the surrounding
space endowing it with both dynamism and tension.
Lun Tuchnowski was the master student of the famous Danish sculptor,
Robert Jacobsen, and has been strongly affected by him. His sculptures
combine two fundamental sculptural ideas of the 20th century. These involve
his use of geometrical forms that freely combine with organic shapes
and “almost passionately let the seemingly contradictory compete
and communicate with each other” (Lothar Romain). His sculptures
pivot between logical architectonic structures and forms that are unsystematic
or organic. They often differentiate themselves through their fragile
balance. The form language is sometimes of a sexual character: single
parts reach into space, break through bodies or take on functions of
opening, closing or compacting.
Tuchnowski previously exhibited in London in a studio exhibition in the
early eighties as a British Council scholar. It was during this time
that he met the British sculptors Eduardo Paolozzi and Anthony Caro.
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