Group NORMAL in
Times Square Show, New York
june 1980, 42nd St & 7th Ave
1980
Normal.
Galerie H. J. Müller, Köln
Normal. Times Square Show, New York
Normal. Galerie Defet, Nürnberg
XI Biennale de Paris. Musée d´Art Modern
1981
Rundschau Deutschland.
Lothringerstr. 13, München
Aljofre Barroco. Salone di Palazzo Ducezio/Noto (Italy)
Normal. Museo Civico d´Arte Contemporanea, Gibellina
Bildwechsel. Akademie der Künste, Berlin
Normal.
Neue Galerie und Sammlung Ludwig, Aachen
1982
Normal. Galerie Nörballe,
Kopenhagen
Normal
und Freunde.
Galerie Beck im Frauenmuseum, Bonn
1984
Von
hier aus.
Neue deutsche Kunst. Messegelände Halle 13, Düsseldorf
(skupina /gruppo/ Normal)
1986
Gruppe Normal. Graphikmappe des Griffelkunstverlags, Hamburg
2005
Normal Group. Prague Biennale 2, Karlín Hall, Praha
2006
Group Normal. Flash Art Museum, Trevi
Group Normal. Museo d´Arte Contemporanea, Isernia
Text z katalogu Normal
/ Catalogue Normal Group
Museo Civico di Gibellana, Italy 1981
Demetrio Paparoni
In the Circus of the Metropolis
The loss of sense: a way
of life has been consumed, the modern way which presupposes faith
in ideology; communication - the communication system - has been
parallely renewed. Related to an aimless reality which has put the
hope of emancipation at zero, language has discovered itself to be
deprived of its old role as a vehicle of information. Man today -
as Lyotard affirms - no longer believes that in a marxist system
all will be well in the end; in the same way the thesis that in a
capitalist society everyone will get rich is no longer credible.
Such awareness has not stopped any clock nor could it ever have
done so, but the becoming in time has stopped being optimistic as
it was for modern man who, moving inside a mentality culturally
connotated as avant-guard lived on hopes of progress.
It was
thought that, interrogating itself on its own specific, language
"spoke", that it gave, that is, new acquisitions. And so
undoubtedly was the case, but in the end such awareness showed
itself to be progressively demotivated by the loss of ideology: as
if philosophical language had found itself without points to
explain and the meaning of words and images consequently thinned
down to become transparent.
Moving
beyond the experiences of the modernist problematic, contemporary
culture has enstaged an operative impartiality which is dance
momentarily tendent towards liberation, speed of mind that
consumes without seeing any problems, remembrances rendered a
funrtion of the play of expressive liberty: we have gone from an
aesthetic composed of fragments to an aesthetic of the fragment
inside mental dimensions characterized by the loss of ideological
moralisms. All is allowed - paradoxically, even the making of
fragments of a nearer past become "relevant again"-because
culture haunts a no man's land belonging to all, a place deprived
of the magnetism of erudite allusions.
The
intuition has not been to recuperate, if only in an instrumental
manner, fragments of the past; it has been, if at all, a necessity
as much as to succeed in utilizing a language that, freezing the
functions of reference points, has taken away our keys to the
reading of a work.
Also
in the works of Peter Angermann, Milan Kunc, John Hummel and Jan
Knap the images are singularly recognizable but their succession
and accumulation give evanescent wholes. The painting is the ftame
delimiting ftagments which fit together like pieces ftom different
jigsaw puzzles and live in the new context shorn of their original
meanings, the negation of the primal common sense.
A
painting released from the ideological yoke cannot but be foreign
to a concept that makes art a journey conditioned by the fidelity
to a project. So, the painting of the Normal Group is narrative
and each work exhaustively describes a different subject experienced
as a further possibility of communication. The thread that
holds the works of Angermann, Kunc, Hummel and Knap together and
that makes Normal a group for all intents and purposes seems to be
identifiable in that these artists do not create information, they
inform us, that is, of things that we already know: navigating the
performable of their own existere they furnish
expressions for use and communication. And it is in
the difference between performability and information that lies
the sense of the authentic open interpretation of their work. Our
attention is drawn towards known elements, come to us from a
window opened on purpose: everyday things consumed and experienced
and still generalizable. The painting does not speak words to be
listened to but if looked at in the eyes allows itself to be
perceived. A language reemerges in which the high (quality of
painting) and the low (the banality of the everyday) are inscribed
in a dynamic relationship of interchange which is no longer
dialectic.
The
Normal Group paints what it sees: a love story or a sports story,
an ecological tragedy or a war joke. We do not laugh. Irony
leading up to satire is not the intention.
If
ftagments are recognizable in these paintings which bring the Neue
Sachlichkeit to mind it has no ideological implications in that,
while the Neue Sachlichkeit set itself educational aims vis à
vis its public by showing subjectivized images presented as
though objective, the Normal Group does not want to state truths.
It likewise exudes the conviction that an artist can allow himself
to reject many social roles but cannot not draw a fake tear
on his own white mask, prop of the nightly show of the melancholy
and pathetic circus of the iridescent carnival of the metropolis.