ART CITIES: London-Martha Jungwirth

Installation view: Martha Jungwirth- All Will Fall, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, London 2022, Courtesy Galerie Thaddaeus RopacOver the past six decades, Martha Jungwirth has forged a singular approach to painting. In contrast to the rational principles of Minimalism and Conceptualism that emerged in the 1960s and 1970s, her paintings are grounded in the body and convey a palpable sense of self. Finger marks, scratches and even shoeprints remain as a visceral record of her presence in the work.

By Efi Michalarou
Photo: Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac Archive

A new series of oil paintings by Austrian artist Martha Jungwirth is exhibited in “All Will Fall”, her most extensive presentation in the UK to date. Poised between abstraction and figuration, her paintings are inspired by what she calls conceptual “pretexts” – impressions from her travels, Greek mythology, the appearances of friends and companions, as well as contemporary political events – capturing fleeting, internal impulses that are recorded in watercolor and paint. Grounded in closely observed perceptions of her environment, this new body of work draws on elements of the natural world depicted in the form of flowers, popular culture expressed through a portrait of Lady Gaga and static objects such as a colouring book. Taking its name from the publication “All Will Fall”, which Jungwirth has in her studio, the exhibition references Francisco Goya’s aquatint etching from “Los Caprichos” (1797–99) illustrating the fate of all those deluded by love and the works on view are reminiscent of the Spanish artist’s oeuvre. The series “Hexenflug” (2022) is inspired by Goya’s “Vuelo de Brujas” (c. 1798) from his group of six paintings related to witchcraft. In Jungwirth’s work, subtle dabs of lime green at the top and in the middle anchor the predominantly red and pink strokes, recalling her earlier works with more figurative allusions. The reference to witchcraft, which was seen as an evil and unnatural element, alludes to the role played by women in power and the threat this has represented for men over the centuries. Conjuring a sense of the body with colors suggestive of flesh and blood, a similar theme reappears in “Lady Gaga” (2022), where the American pop star becomes symbolic of contemporary female power in showbusiness. Jungwirth’s figures often appear on small sections of her brown paper, surrounded by areas of untouched cardboard or collaged paper whose absorbent surfaces preserve her decisive marks which, once made, cannot be altered. By connecting her practice with oil paint, which she describes as ‘more massive, and dense’, with the ‘unified, liquid, transparent’ qualities of watercolor, her images are propelled beyond the easily identifiable. The layered clusters, forms and marks can be transparent, opaque, or somewhere in between, with some appearing deliberate while others seem accidental. Over the past six decades, Jungwirth has forged a singular approach to painting. Mingling mythical or universal subject matter, her compositions reveal themselves to her during the painting process. The artist creates in concert with her materials to produce works that are poised between chance and calculation. At times more predominant in the pictorial space – as in the series “Nicht mehr und nicht weniger” (2022) – the ‘constellations of blotches’ never overwhelm her chosen surfaces. Referencing Goya’s “Ni mas ni menos”  (1796–97), in which he caricatures the portraitist as a monkey and the sitter as a donkey, Jungwirth’s dynamic composition seems to exteriorise the idea of missing visual links between imagination and reality. This blending of the two realms emerges from her fluid painterly process, which constantly explores the transition from a material to a transcendent world. In contrast to the rational principles of Minimalism and Conceptualism that emerged in the 1960s and 1970s, Jungwirth’s paintings are grounded in the body and convey a palpable sense of self.

Photo: Installation view: Martha Jungwirth- All Will Fall, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, London 2022, Courtesy Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac

Info: Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, London Ely House, 37 Dover Street, London, United Kingdom, Duration: 31/5-30/7/2022, Days & Hours: Tue-Sat 10:00-18:00, https://ropac.net/

Martha Jungwirth, Ohne Titel, aus der Serie "Nicht mehr und nicht weniger", 2021, Oil on cardboard (painting back), 64 x 48 cm, © Martha Jungwirth, Courtesy the artist and Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac
Martha Jungwirth, Ohne Titel, aus der Serie “Nicht mehr und nicht weniger”, 2021, Oil on cardboard (painting back), 64 x 48 cm, © Martha Jungwirth, Courtesy the artist and Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac

 

 

Martha Jungwirth, Ohne Titel, aus der Serie "Nicht mehr und nicht weniger", 2021, Oil on cardboard (painting back), 42.3 x 33 cm, © Martha Jungwirth, Courtesy the artist and Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac
Martha Jungwirth, Ohne Titel, aus der Serie “Nicht mehr und nicht weniger”, 2022, Oil on cardboard (painting back), 42.3 x 33 cm, © Martha Jungwirth, Courtesy the artist and Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac

 

 

Martha Jungwirth, Ohne Titel, aus der Serie "Nicht mehr und nicht weniger", 2021, Oil on cardboard (painting back), 63 x 47 cm, © Martha Jungwirth, Courtesy the artist and Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac
Martha Jungwirth, Ohne Titel, aus der Serie “Nicht mehr und nicht weniger”, 2022, Oil on cardboard (painting back), 63 x 47 cm, © Martha Jungwirth, Courtesy the artist and Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac

 

 

Martha Jungwirth, Ohne Titel, aus der Serie "Nicht mehr und nicht weniger", 2021, Oil on cardboard (painting back), 42.7 x 32.6 cm, © Martha Jungwirth, Courtesy the artist and Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac
Martha Jungwirth, Ohne Titel, aus der Serie “Nicht mehr und nicht weniger”, 2022, Oil on cardboard (painting back), 42.7 x 32.6 cm, © Martha Jungwirth, Courtesy the artist and Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac