Paul’s Fairs: Stories of Frieze London
12 October 2024 • Paul Carey-Kent
The layout of Frieze London has been shaken up this year, and the fair feels fresh. As ever, though, it’s… Read More
Anne Imhof, born in 1978, has risen to prominence as one of the most celebrated artists of her generation over the past decade. Currently splitting her time between Berlin and New York, Imhof’s journey as an artist began in Frankfurt am Main, where she embarked on a remarkable path of self-discovery. While working as a bouncer at a local nightclub, she simultaneously honed her skills in drawing and music, setting the stage for a transformative artistic career. Her early years in Frankfurt laid the foundation for her distinctive approach to art.
Before officially enrolling at the Städelschule, the city’s academy of fine arts, Imhof organized a groundbreaking event that would later be regarded as the first entry in her catalogue raisonné. This event, a one-night-only performance held in a red-light district bar, showcased her innovative spirit. Imhof invited two boxers to participate, and she also recruited a band. The boxers were given a unique directive: their fight should last for as long as the music played, while the band was instructed to perform for as long as the boxers fought. Looking back on this event, Imhof reflected, “It was all pretty red—the table dance bar and the noses. Looking back on it, I realized that it had been one way to create a picture.”
Imhof’s artistic journey has evolved significantly since those early days. Her practice now encompasses a wide range of artistic forms, including performance and choreography, painting and drawing, music, installation, and sculpture. While her work spans diverse media, she consistently approaches her art from the perspective of a painter. Imhof’s evocative abstractions, whether expressed through performance, two-dimensional images, or sculpted objects, are characterized by her masterful use of perspective and framing. This unique perspective is also evident in her treatment of the human body as a gestural canvas, the deliberate positioning and posture of her subjects, and her use of symbolism and color. Imhof is undeniably a creator of visual narratives, and her images, whether in motion or still, evoke the rich history of painting while engaging with the contemporary consumer culture’s obsessions.
Imhof’s performances have often been described as “tableaux vivants,” or living paintings. As the live element of her performances gradually fades, her creations transform into “natures mortes,” revealing traces of a melancholic beauty that mirrors the artist’s captivating process of blurring the lines between life and art. Imhof’s unique talent lies in her ability to transform life into images and vice versa, a process that is both captivating and haunting.
In this artistic journey, Imhof is not alone; she is surrounded by a community of collaborators, including friends, dancers, artists, musicians, poets, and models. Together, they coexist with the audience within her immersive and durational installations. Through their movements, singing, and ethereal presence marked by deliberate passivity, they breathe life into Imhof’s art. Although they follow a notated score, their ritualistic actions—often involving slow-motion walks, spilled fluids, falls, and moments of support—unfold organically, shaped by the contingencies of collaboration and directed in real time by the artist herself.
Imhof has the remarkable ability to infuse both bodies and objects with an intense, almost primal energy. She choreographs her figures and stages her objects to create intimate portraits of radical dis-identification. Her art explores ephemeral yet powerful desires, often channeled through avatars of her own self, with Eliza Douglas serving as her artistic partner and muse. Douglas took center stage in Imhof’s Faust (2017) at the German Pavilion during the 57th International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia, earning the coveted Golden Lion for Best National Participation. Imhof’s artistic project continually evolves, offering an open-ended series of imaginative intensities. Her notable works include the exhibition and performance cycles Rage (2014–15), Deal (2015), Angst (2016), and Sex (2019–21), each pushing the boundaries of artistic expression.
In conclusion, Anne Imhof’s artistry is a captivating exploration of the intersection of life and art. Her diverse body of work spans multiple artistic mediums, with her unique perspective as a painter serving as a unifying thread. Imhof’s performances and installations invite viewers into a world where time, space, and the human body are transformed into mesmerizing living canvases. With her visionary approach, she continues to push the boundaries of contemporary art, leaving an indelible mark on the artistic landscape of her generation.
12 October 2024 • Paul Carey-Kent
The layout of Frieze London has been shaken up this year, and the fair feels fresh. As ever, though, it’s… Read More
24 July 2024 • Mark Westall
Last night July 23rd six billboards by the German artist Anne Imhof were vandalised along one of Bregenz’s busiest streets
2 July 2024 • Mark Westall
Bregenz, Marseille, Sant Miquel de Balansat, Gstaad & London exhibitions to visit this Summer.
31 May 2024 • Mark Westall
Kunsthaus Bregenz to open Wish You Were Gay, an exhibition by Anne Imhof. Spanning all four floors of KUB
3 January 2024 • Mark Westall
In the spring of 2024, a set of iconic works from the Pinault Collection will be displayed throughout the Bourse de Commerce.
29 September 2023 • Mark Westall
Tate Modern today announced a new annual commission the Infinities Commission to support experimental and visionary new work.
26 April 2023 • Mark Westall
This Saturday Sprüth Magers presents a free screening of four films by Anne Imhof in conjunction with her exhibition at the Los Angeles gallery, two of which will receive their US premiere.
22 February 2023 • Mark Westall
CIRCA collaborates with Anne Imhof to present #YOUTH24 – a 24-hour print fundraiser aiding youth and the countless others affected by the ongoing war in Ukraine.
3 February 2023 • Mark Westall
Sprüth Magers to present Anne Imhof, EMO, a solo exhibition representing the largest presentation of the artist’s work in the United States to date and her first in Los Angeles.
23 November 2022 • Paul Carey-Kent
Leading German gallery Sprüth Magers started in Cologne, where Monika Sprüth (in 1983) and Philomene Magers (in 1991) opened separately, merging in 1998.
17 November 2022 • Mark Westall
Anne Imhof has taken over the Stedelijk’s 1,100-square-meter lower-level gallery. Combining art, architecture, light, and a sound composed especially for… Read More
31 October 2022 • Charlotte Russell
Part gallery, part morgue, part locker room, part horror maze, Imhof’s current show, Avatar II leads us through feelings of tension, uneasiness, frustration and paranoia.
9 October 2022 • Tabish Khan
Lockers, tables, colonialism, history and darkness during Frieze Week
15 September 2022 • Mark Westall
Sprüth Magers is delighted to announce a solo exhibition of new works by Anne Imhof in London – the first show to span all four of the gallery’s floors.
22 June 2022 • Paul Carey-Kent
Art Basel and it’s satellite fair seem to be back to normal this year. There’s plenty of variety – more so than at Frize London last year –
24 February 2022 • Mark Westall
Sweet Lust’ is an exhibition curated by Michèle Lamy in collaboration with White Cube Senior Director Mathieu Paris.
10 May 2021 • Mark Westall
In collaboration with Galerie Buchholz, Sprüth Magers has announced the representation of Anne Imhof. Confronting viewers with attitude, endurance and a complex physical vocabulary, the German artist’s multidisciplinary works fuse brooding nihilism with fierce gesture. With her powerful and engaging works Imhof has emerged as one of the most pioneering contemporary artists of her generation.
6 January 2021 • Mark Westall
Palais de Tokyo has invited Anne Imhof to realise an exhibition occupying all its spaces in the winter of 2021.
4 January 2021 • Mark Westall
What a year 2020 was! Glad to get that over but seems like the beginning of 2021 is going to… Read More
28 December 2020 • Mark Westall
A special New Year’s Eve event featuring Anne Imhof and Patti Smith will be broadcast on FAD & CIRCA
29 August 2019 • Mark Westall
Deriving from the acclaimed performance and exhibition—staged by Anne Imhof at the 57th International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia and awarded the Golden Lion for Best National Participation— the album Faust is part documentation and part elaboration, the sonic capture and extrapolation of the gestures, intensities, and durations of the live event.
17 March 2019 • Mark Westall
Opening this week Anne Imhof will create a new large-scale commission for the BMW Tate Live Exhibition. Imhof, who won the prestigious Golden Lion at last year’s Venice Biennale
27 September 2017 • Mark Westall
We’ve just been in Stockholm for The Absolut Art Weekend