I’ll be part of “Preparing For Darkness Volume 2: Breaking God’s Heart” during Berlin Art Week
@ Kühlhaus, Berlin
Opening : Tuesday, September 25, 7pm
September 25 – 30, 2018
Kühlhaus am Gleisdreieck
Luckenwalder Straße 3, 10963 Berlin
U1 / U2 Am Gleisdreieck
Exhibition space: 4th and 5th floor
Artists: Inna Artemova, Shigeo Arikawa, Daniel Behrendt, Radu Belcin, Adam Bota, Rudy Cremonini, Fabio la Fauci, Simone Haack, René Holm, Shingo Inao, Maurizio L´Altrella, Adam Magyar, Valentina Murabito, Gabor A. Nagy, Enda O'Donoghue, Flavia Pitis, Juan Miguel Pozo, Michael H. Rohde, Nicola Samorì, Steffi Stangl, Stepanek & Maslin, Richard Stipl, Attila Szücs, Alexander Tinei, Miriam Vlaming, The √ision, Claudia Virginia Vitari, Josef Zlamal, Alexander Zakharov.
Curated by Uwe Goldenstein
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at Berlin, Germany
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Some drawings, pencil on paper... an unfinished series from a few years back (at Berlin, Germany)
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Moving day (at Atelierhaus Mengerzeile & Kunsthalle m3)
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Some exhibition images from yesterday (at Bernheimer Contemporary)
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at Galerie Christine Knauber
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Substitute - Moon / Horse / Cow (Automatic Return)
(2014) Oil & Acrylic on Canvas,
Triptych: 140 x 170 cm, 60 x 80 cm & 60 x 80 cm.
San Francisco, November 20th 1973, The Who played the opening concert on their Quadrophenia US tour at a venue called the Cow Palace. Before the show Keith Moon, the drummer, ingested a concoction of horse tranquilizers and brandy. Allegedly he took to stage declaring “I can take it, I’m Keith fucking Moon.”
About 70 minutes into the show during the song “Won’t Get Fooled Again”, Moon began to waver and eventually slumped over his drum kit, and passed out. He was carried o stage given an injection of cortisone and cold shower and after about 30 minutes he returned to the stage. The concert continued but after just a few more minutes he passed out again. He was carried o again and this time didn’t return.
Guitarist Pete Townshend asked the crowd, “Can anybody play the drums? I mean somebody good!” A 19 year old called Scot Halpin was selected from the crowd, came up on stage, was given a shot of brandy for his nerves, took the seat behind the drums and nished out the rest of concert as the Who’s substitute drummer. Together they played two blues classics “Smokestack Lightning” and “Spoonful”, followed by a Who song “Naked Eye.”
This triptych is made up of two small canvases, one presenting an image from a found photograph of a record player and the other a structural motif of a grid overlaid with layers of at blocks of colour. The main canvas, the largest of the three, presents an image based on a video still culled from footage found online of this infamous Who concert in 1973 showing Scot Halpin on drums.
http://www.endaodonoghue.com/dynamics-asteroid/substitute-moon-horse-cow-automatic-return
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at Atelierhaus Mengerzeile & Kunsthalle m3
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at Atelierhaus Mengerzeile & Kunsthalle m3
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at Atelierhaus Mengerzeile & Kunsthalle m3
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Golden canvas
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at Atelierhaus Mengerzeile & Kunsthalle m3
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