Art in America - March 2016_

(Brent) #1

152 MARCH 2016 EXHIBITION REVIEWS


tures she commissioned andigurines or items she bought at
lea markets. With an ironic nod to trends in contemporary
art, she once wryly remarked: “his is not Minimal but
Maximal art.”
Such is the magnitude of Darboven’s oeuvre that it
easilyilled two of the largest exhibition spaces in Germany.
he Haus der Kunst in Munich and the Bundeskunsthalle
in Bonn organized a two-venue retrospective, each institu-
tion focusing on adiferent part of her practice.he Munich
showing, “Enlightenment,” concentrated on Darboven’s
working method and her exploration of the history of sci-
ence as well as her research into literary and culturaligures.
For example, herErf indungen, die unsere Welt verändert haben
(Inventions that Changed the World), 1996, is dedicated
to transportation and communication technologies, such as
Gutenberg’s printing press. In Bonn, “Time Histories” con-
sidered her stance on political events and German history,
placing her biography at center stage.
he Haus der Kunst presentation was divided into 11
rooms and showcased works from the late 1960s to 2000. he
music room from Darboven’s Hamburg studio was recon-
structed here. It contains Darboven’s collection of musical
instruments arranged in groups, along with various types of
documents, her correspondence and an assortment of sculptures
from Africa. In an interview she once said that her aim was

German artist Hanne Darboven (1941-2009) was essentially
the opposite of Herman Melville’s character Bartleby, the
Scrivener. While Bartleby, at his law-oice job, one day
refused to do his work of copying documents by hand—
a decision that escalated to his rejection of everything, even
eating—nothing, it seems, could keep Darboven from
writing. During her self-imposed, strictly regimented eight-
hour workdays, she generated row upon row of handwritten
numbers, U shapes, boxes and other notations,illing tens
of thousands of pieces of paper over the course of her four-
decade career.
After a two-year stay in New York, when she met some
of the main protagonists of Conceptual art, including Sol
LeWitt, with whom she maintained a close friendship,
Darboven returned in 1968 to her native Hamburg, where
she remained until her death. During the late ’60s, she began
producing her signature work, which—serving as a method
of marking time—involved translating calendars and the
like into new numerical or visual systems based on her own
inscrutable calculations.he resultant framed sheets covered
countless yards of wall fromloor to ceiling.
In the late 1970s Darboven began creating installations
that encompassed her handwritten pieces, collages (incorpo-
rating magazine pages, postcards and photographs, among
other items) and three-dimensional elements, such as sculp-

HANNE DARBOVEN


MUNICH AND BONN — Haus der Kunst and Bundeskunsthalle


View of Hanne
Darboven’s mixed-
medium installation
Quartett “88”
(Quartet “88”),1988,
at the Haus der
Kunst.

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