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CARLONE CONTEMPORARY: herman de vries

108 pounds of lavender

Dutch artist herman de vries has held to his credo that nature is art for over fifty years. A trained botanist and landscape gardener, he turned to art at an early age and gained recognition for his Art Informel paintings and as a member of the artist group nul. Ecological issues became a key theme in his art from the 1970s onward—to this day he is one of the most important exponents of Environmental Art. In his artistic research, de vries combines scientific methods such as observation, classification, and archiving with stories from mythology and philosophical questions. He collects all manner of objects on his daily explorations of nature in the Steigerwald forest in Germany and on his travels: flowers, stones, sticks, earth, bones, grasses, minerals, and more. These objets trouvés are arranged in sensory installations that reveal a simplicity with an intrinsic aesthetic power. His work is always guided by a deep understanding and respect for the earth’s natural resources. His Conceptual work 108 pounds of lavender flowers of 1991 comprises fragrant purple flowers arranged concentrically on the floor. This creates a sensory visitor experience beneath the Baroque ceiling fresco of the Carlone Hall. 

Curated by Stella Rollig. 
Assistant Curator: Johanna Hofer 

#CarloneContemporary

Impressions

Biography

herman de vries in his studio
photo: Katharina Winterhalter

 

herman de vries was born in Alkmaar in the Netherlands in 1931. The artist lives and works in Eschenau in Germany. Exhibitions (selection): Somerset House, London; MuseumsQuartier, Vienna; Georg Kolbe Museum, Berlin; Ernst-Barlach-Haus, Hamburg. In 1997 he participated in the Skulptur Projekte in Münster; in 2015 he represented the Netherlands at the 56th Venice Biennale. His work is in the following collections (selection): Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, Kunstmuseum Den Haag, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

 

CARLONE CONTEMPORARY

The CARLONE CONTEMPORARY series presents contemporary works in the Carlone Hall of the Upper Belvedere in six-month intervals. From the frescoed ancient world of the deities Apollo and Diana to the present day, contemporary artists bridge the Baroque pictorial program with new artistic stances.