They Rule the Valley

Opening: 9 March 2007, 7 p.m.
10 March - 05 April 2007

Ellen Bornkessel, Ruth Hommelsheim, Werner Huthmacher, Bettina Lockemann, Ulrike Ludwig, Jens Lüstraeten, Sabine Schründer, Sergio Zevallos

Please scroll down for images.

We are pleased to announce the opening of Loris — gallery for contemporary art with the group exhibition Sie regieren das Tal (They Rule the Valley), presenting work by Ellen Bornkessel, Ruth Hommelsheim, Werner Huthmacher, Bettina Lockemann, Ulrike Ludwig, Jens Lüstraeten, Sabine Schründer, and Sergio Zevallos. Loris is a new artist’s cooperative gallery under the direction of art historian Imke Ehlers. It concentrates on artists working in photography, video, and installation.

The title of the exhibition Sie regieren das Tal refers to the tension between social landscapes and individual localization. The eight artists address the various functions and responses to urban or rural space, as well as strategies of observation and questions of the distribution of power. The space that emerges in the works is ambiguous, eluding clear definition. The works look at places, their social significance, and the possibilities of individual use and interpretation.

The photo work Exposition #7 by Werner Huthmacher focuses on close up fragments of animal bodies. It refers to man’s attempt to have absolute control over nature, which is only truly successful in a museum of natural history. Ruth Hommelsheim’s photo shows a landscape After Nature focusing on the suspended state of an industrialized rural area’s indefinable quality. Ellen Bornkessel’s photographic series Play (I-VI) is a documentary tale. Oscillating between documentation and dramatization, the urban backdrop functions as a stage and the young people in the pictures like actors. In Sabine Schründer’s work Intrude (into) II, the increasing surveillance of our social landscape “illuminate” strategically spotlights that rob the darkness of its power of concealment. In Bettina Lockemann’s Code Orange, white vans keep appearing, recalling dubious surveillance strategies. As vehicles that can be used by either terrorists or law officials, they are evidence of how ambiguously images can be used by the media. Ulrike Ludwig presents Spaces that are empty of function and objects. What remains is the architectural infrastructure needed for the flow of information, recalling the relationship between information and regulation. The video Five Bottles and a Football by Jens Lüstraeten is a contemplative review of the pieces and piles of waste left behind by society, which become tragicomical actors in a designed cultural landscape. Sergio Zevallo’s portraits recall police mug shots—manipulating them in his Maps series adds an additional variation of localization, and questions the identifying recognizability of passport photos.  



Home
> Exhibitions
News
Artists
Gallery
Editions
Press
Contact
Werner Huthmacher
exposition #7 l 2006 l C-Print behind acryl matt l 115x220 cm
Ruth Hommelsheim
from: Nach der Natur 1 l 2005 l
Piezo-Print, framed l 100x140 cm
Sabine Schründer
from: intrude (into) l 2006 l Piezo-Print, Alu-Diond, framed l 80x100 cm
Ellen Bornkessel
from: Play l 2007 l digitaler C-Print,
Alu-Dibond, framed l 100x90 cm
Bettina Lockemann
from: Code Orange l 2003 l silver-gelatin print l ca. 33x50cm
Jens Lüstraeten
five bottles and a football l 2006 l
videoloop 9 min.
Ulrike Ludwig
from: Spaces l 2005 l
C-Print behind acryl l 99x80 cm
Sergio Zevallos
Maps 3 l 2000-2003 l
Digital C-Print l 60x60 cm