2024


2 Fast 2 Safe
08.03. - 17.03.2024


2023


Day Scuptures
03.11. - 18.11.2023

Softpretty
07.10. - 22.10.2023

Chorusing
23.06. - 29.06.2023


PERSONA
30.03. - 04.04.2023


TIDAL
17.03. - 24.03.2023

The Dream
04.02. - 09.03.2023


2022


Voodoo for Fun & Profit
9.12. - 16.12.2022

I think they should break up 
18.11. - 25.11.2022


ZDRÓJ
16.10. - 23.10.22


THREE COURSE MENU
05.07 - 10.07.22

KNIFE AND COMB
10.06. - 15.06.22

THE PERFECT SMILE: SIX TEETH SHOW
07.05. - 12.05.22

“IF I WANT TO I WILL”
18.04. - 02.05.22


2021


Self-Service
10.12. - 20.12.21

BONES
20.11. - 05.12.21

facets, faces
22.10. - 31.10.21

memory is a social organ
10.09. - 19.09.21

Ungrowing
18.06. - 03.07.21

Side Chair, Artist’s Table, #4 Oval Box
04.06. - 14.06.21

HARDCOEUR
23.04. - 30.04.21

Elements of Reading
16.04. - 18.04.21



2020


side by side
24.07. - 29.07.20

ONE AGREEMENT
09.07. - 19.07.20


FAMILIENBANDE
20.03. - 13.04.20

Smells Like Team Spirit
13.03. - 15.03.20

Don't worry, there will be more problems.
21.02. - 07.03.22



2019


tracing echoes
01.11. - 10.11.19

Museum der Kritik
24.10. - 26.10.19

Sekundenbruchteile
17.10. - 20.10.19

less skin
06.09. - 13.09.19

IN ACTU. IN POTENTIA.
17.05. - 26.05.19

Soundbathing
16.02. - 17.02.19

Rips
25.01. - 30.01.19



2018


Subject:Fwd:Unknown
18.10. - 09.12.18


Subject:Fwd:Unknown / Yutie Lee
30.11. - 09.12.18


Subject:Fwd:Unknown / Tim Etchells
16.11. - 25.11.18


Subject:Fwd:Unknown / Nora Turato
02.11. - 11.11.18


Subject:Fwd:Unknown / Michal Heiman 
19.10. - 28.10.18

Gentle Heterodoxy. Social Body
and its Enchantments
30.09. - 09.10.18

Partinuscha's
24.08.18

Proud to present...
15.07. - 21.07.18


-46,08°
11.02. - 25.02.18



2017


P r e s h o w r i t u a l
28.10. - 24.11.17

SuperLiv/fe
09.10. - 10.10.17

Is the peacock merely beautiful or also honest?
01.06. - 23.06.17



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Ungrowing


18.06. - 03.07.21

with
Elsa Stanyer
curated by
Sophia Scherer 



By confronting the artistic work of her own mother, Elsa Stanyer begins to discover unconscious parallels and echoes in her own artistic practice and that of her mother. This juxtaposition forms the conceptual framework of the exhibition. The inclusion of the unseen work of another person, in this case her own mother, who was compelled to abandon her artistic activities, when she became a mother, is understood as a reflective momentum of the self and a "digestive" gesture of an inherited identity. The exhibition Ungrowing refers to cyclical states and notions of growth: the works on display reflect not only processes of growing up or outgrowing, but above all the impossible withdrawal or reversal of organic and biological processes such as social roles.

Opening, Friday 18.6. 4 – 8 pm

Saturday 19.6. + Sunday 20.6. 5 – 8 pm

Thursday 24.06. + Friday 25.06. 5 – 8 pm

Saturday 26.06. 3 – 6 pm

Wednesday 30.6. 5 – 8 pm

Thursday 1.7. 5 – 8 pm

Closing: Saturday 3.7. 5 – 8 pm

and by appointment via mail sophiayvettscherer@gmail.com or elsastanyer@gmail.com.

Please maintain hygiene and distance regulations, maximum of 2 people in the space at the same time.



Elsa Stanyer, Ungrowing, 2021, short film, Super 8, iPhone, audio, 2:41 min


Elsa Stanyer, Ungrowing, 2021, exhibition view, fffriedrich, Frankfurt   


Elsa Stanyer, Toto, I have a feeling we´re not in Kansas anymore, 2021, photo-etched
copperplate, 20.5 x 28 cm

Photography: Ian Waelder / all images copyright and courtesy of the artist



„The human is from the start an adult. In other words, the individual who is introduced to us as the first moment of the human, the outbreak of the human onto the world, is posited as if he was never a child; as if he was never provided for, never depended upon parents or kinship relations, or upon social institutions, in order to survive and grow and (presumably) learn.“  

– Judith Butler, The Force of Nonviolence



By confronting her mother's artistic work, Elsa Stanyer begins to discover parallels between her practice and her own – in Ungrowing, this juxtaposition becomes the conceptual framework. Reflecting on the unseen work of another person - in case of this exhibition, that of her own mother, who ceased her artistic activities at the time of becoming a mother – is understood as a "digestive" gesture. The exhibition title thereby refers to growth and cyclical states: In the works, Elsa Stanyer not only reflects on processes of growing up or outgrowing, but above all reflects on the impossibility of withdrawing or reversing biological processes such as social roles. While growing up is irresistible, growing out of social or corporate roles is influenced by the desire for emotional attachment and simultaneous detachment.

The short film Ungrowing (2021) deals with the feeling of being stuck in two time levels as well as the persistence in parallel roles: mother, child, human. Elsa Stanyer interweaves Super 8 and digital footage with a fragmentary audio and raises questions about identity and self-discovery under the condition of being a child and becoming a mother. As the mother remembers the physicality of her own deceased mother, the de-shelling of home-grown fleshy beans exposes a foetal, visceral matter, becoming a productive and cyclical act between mother and daughter. The film not only points to the vulnerability of the "mother figure" itself, but also shows how much negotiations on motherhood are socially isolated and privately connoted. Ungrowing (2021) is about loss and grief and shows the personal documentation of a collective experience.

A counter-position to the maternalistic focus of the exhibition is formed by the prints hanging centrally from the ceiling, the backs of the prints revealing a glimpse of its bruised colored ink. The two photographs are part of the series 16 Marlons (2005/2021) and build the recourse to the archive of the mother, whose pictorial subjects are often associated with allegories of violence, nature, perceived orders of the world as well as human instincts. 16 Marlons (2005/2021) show a TV screen displaying the film On the Waterfront (1954) with Marlon Brando's face and, at the edge of the image, the outline of a woman who appears to be supporting him. Whether he is in pain or close to death remains hidden in this depiction, with the reinterpretation of the moving medium into a static one transfiguring its fictional or real meaning. Elsa Stanyer thus creates a two-dimensional void despite the supposed view into a television set. Brando's facial expression could be a mimicry of the ancient sculpture Laokoon, whose highly exaggerated, masculine figure in Greek mythology embodies the ideal image of the father who tried to liberate his sons from the grip of a snake. Moving between pain and passion, his iconic pose remains ambiguous, but it evokes an intuitive compassion for the sufferer ("his misery goes to our soul; but we wish, like this great man, to be able to endure misery", Johann Joachim Winckelmann). Juxtaposed with the short film, these works reflect on the representation of artificially evoked compassion and genuine grief. Who experiences empathy and protection? What is grieved and what is not?

Another level of medially transformed images is opened up by the two works Toto, I have a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore (2021), which refers to the Hollywood fantasy musical The Wizard of Oz (1939). With these works, Elsa Stanyer continues her mother's unfinished work and reactivates it - she brings it to life. The copper plates, which were made using the photo etching process, show scenes in which the young protagonist Dorothy embarks on her dreamed journey to Oz. On her way through the land "over the rainbow", she encounters various characters who put her to a moral test. She has to form a judgement, differentiate between good and evil, get acquainted with brave and fearful, reasonable and irrational beings. In the journey, she discovers her independence for the first time: unprotected, far from home.

Detachment from intimate atmospheres and abandonment are recurring themes in Elsa Stanyer's practice, but not as a subjective condition, but rather as a feature of our shared and interdependent lives. We are vulnerable to those social structures that make our lives possible, and when they waver, we waver too. In psychoanalytic theses, "becoming a subject" is preceded by a supposed process of detachment that thus leads to self-empowerment. In this context, Elsa Stanyer's work explores the possibility of not simply overcoming dependencies in order to achieve self-sufficiency: Rather, these relationships marked by dependency are to be accepted as a condition for equivalent existence, in order to let something grow out of it.