On the Politics of Delicacy
The Robert Anton Theatre
&
Yael Bartana, Duggie Fields, Federico García Lorca, Nicholas Grafia, Hannah Höch, Karolina Jablonska, Krzysztof Jung, Tadeusz Kantor, Stanislava Kovalcikova, Zoe Leonard, Liliane Lijn, Raúl Martínez, Joanna Piotrowska, Jimmy De Sana, Mikolaj Sobczak, Kazimierz Wisniak, a.o.
Curated by Anke Kempkes
January 24, 7pm
The Accursed Ones, Performance by Mikolaj Sobczak & Nicholas Grafia
January 25, 7pm
Queer Performativity in Times of Political Polarization, Conversation with Performers Mikolaj Sobczak, Nicholas Grafia, Uel, Billy Morgan, Agata Grabowska and Filip Rutkowski with Igor Bloch. Moderated by Anke Kempkes
Songs of Poland
Poetry Reading by Billy Morgan
Capitain Petzel is pleased to announce the group exhibition On the Politics of Delicacy conceived around the Robert Anton Theatre Collection. In the early 1970s Robert Anton (1949-1984) created a surreal miniature theatre which quickly achieved cult status and fascinated audiences both in the US and Europe. By bringing together multiple influences – from Antonin Artaud’s writings on the Theatre of Cruelty, alchemist principles of transformation and hybridity, post-WWI characters of George Grosz and Otto Dix, to the eccentric creatures of Hieronymus Bosch; but also early Hollywood and Disney motives, Federico Fellini’s baroque fantasies, and pop cultural impulses of his era – Anton created a unique visual language. Due to the intimacy of his performances which often took place in his loft with a maximum capacity of 18 spectators, his plays remained something of New York’s best-kept secret, a refuge into the surreal imaginary. The exhibition gives insight into Anton’s work by showing his intriguingly sculpted figurines (effectively, his ‘actors’), props and drawings.
At Capitain Petzel, curator Anke Kempkes contextualises the oeuvre of Robert Anton for the first time by unfolding thematic trajectories that resonate with his work, namely the politics of the home theatre, surrealist political theatre, the concept of ‘monstrosity’ in postwar female avant-garde sculpture, a new female painterly symbolism, and queer performativity in times of political polarization. With such specific trajectories in mind, a dynamic dialogue takes place between Anton’s oeuvre and works permeating both genre and epoch by German Dada artist Hannah Höch and Spanish poet and theatre director Federico García Lorca; Anton’s theatre pioneer contemporary Tadeusz Kantor and scenographer Kazimierz Wisniak; works by Wanda Czelkowska and Liliane Lijn; post-modernist and queer artists from East and West Duggie Fields, Jimmy De Sana, Krzysztof Jung, Raúl Martínez and Zoe Leonard; and contemporary artists Yael Bartana, Joanna Piotrowska, Stanislava Kovalcikova, Karolina Jablonska, Mikolaj Sobczak, Nicholas Grafia, Billy Morgan and Uel.
The Robert Anton Theatre collection was previously on display at Foksal Gallery Foundation, Warsaw (2018); The Edge, Bath University Gallery (2019); and Tramway, Glasgow (2019).
Our special thanks go to Anke Kempkes and the Bette Stoler Collection, New York.
_
Capitain Petzel freut sich, die Gruppenausstellung On the Politics of Delicacy anzukündigen, die als Ausgangspunkt erstmals in Deutschland die Robert Anton Theatre Collection präsentiert. In den frühen 1970er Jahren schuf Robert Anton (1949-1984) ein surreales Miniaturtheater, das schnell Kultstatus erlangte und das Publikum sowohl in den USA als auch in Europa faszinierte. Anton kreierte eine einzigartige Bildsprache, indem er diverse Einflüsse zusammenbrachte – von Antonin Artauds Schriften zum Theater der Grausamkeit, über alchemistische Prinzipien der Transformation und Hybridität, bis hin zu den Nachkriegscharakteren von George Grosz und Otto Dix, den exzentrischen Kreaturen von Hieronymus Bosch, aber auch frühen Hollywood- und Disney-Motiven, Federico Fellinis barocken Fantasien und popkulturellen Impulsen seiner Zeit. Aufgrund der Intimität seiner Aufführungen, die oft in einem Loft mit einer maximalen Kapazität von 18 Zuschauer*innen stattfanden, blieben seine Stücke eines von New Yorks bestgehüteten Geheimnissen, eine Zuflucht in die surreale Imagination. Die Ausstellung zeigt Antons faszinierend geformte Figuren (seine ‚Schauspieler*innen’), Requisiten und Zeichnungen.
Bei Capitain Petzel findet zum ersten Mal eine Kontextualisierung von Robert Antons Werk statt. Die Kuratorin Anke Kempkes kehrt die thematischen Verläufe, die in seiner Arbeit widerhallen, heraus. Dabei geht es vor allem um die politische Bedeutung des privaten Raums für queeres Theater, das surrealistische politische Theater, das Konzept von Monstrosität in der weiblichen Avantgarde der 1960er Jahre, einen neuen weiblichen malerischen Symbolismus und eine queere Performativität in Zeiten politischer Polarisierung. Vor diesem Hintergrund entfaltet sich ein spannungsreicher Dialog zwischen Antons Werk und Arbeiten weiterer Künstler*innen, die sowohl verschiedene Genres als auch Epochen durchziehen, darunter die deutsche Dada-Künstlerin Hannah Höch und der spanische Dichter und Theaterregisseur Federico García Lorca; Antons Zeitgenosse und Theaterpionier Tadeusz Kantor und Szenograph Kazimierz Wisniak; Werke von Wanda Czelkowska und Liliane Lijn; postmoderne und queere Künstler*innen aus Ost und West, wie Duggie Fields, Jimmy De Sana, Krzysztof Jung, Raúl Martínez und Zoe Leonard; sowie die zeitgenössischen Künstler*innen Yael Bartana, Joanna Piotrowska, Stanislava Kovalcikova, Karolina Jablonska, Mikolaj Sobczak, Nicholas Grafia, Billy Morgan und Uel.
Die Robert Anton Theatre Collection war zuvor in der Foksal Gallery Foundation in Warschau (2018), bei The Edge, Bath University Gallery (2019) und Tramway in Glasgow (2019) zu sehen.
Unser besonderer Dank gilt Anke Kempkes und der Sammlung Bette Stoler in New York.
-
Stanislava KovalcikovaMisty (Foggy), 2017Oil, wax, linen110 x 160 cm
43 1/4 x 63 in -
Raúl MartínezUntitled, from the Series La Conquista, 1990Collage/ mixed mediaImage Dimensions:
51 x 73 cm / 20 x 28.7 inches
Framed Dimensions:
56 x 77,3 cm / 22 x 30.4 inches -
Raúl MartínezCollage No., Serie de la Conquista, 1990Collage/mixed mediaImage Dimensions:
52 x 73 cm / 20.5 x 28.7 inches
Framed Dimensions:
56 x 77,3 cm / 22 x 30.4 inches -
Raúl MartínezUntitled, from the Series La Conquista, ca. 1990-92Collage/ mixed mediaImage Dimensions:
73,5 x 51,5 cm / 28.9 x 20.3 inches
Framed Dimensions:
78 x 55,7 cm / 30.7 x 21.9 inches -
Raúl MartínezUntitled, from the Serie de la Conquista, 1990Collage/mixed mediaImage Dimensions:
52 x 73 cm / 20.5 x 28.7 inches
Framed Dimensions:
56 x 77,3 cm / 22 x 30.4 inches -
Joanna PiotrowskaXXIII / FROWST, 2013/14Silver gelatin hand print130 x 160 cm
51.2 x 63 inches1 AP, Edition of 1 -
Stefan ArczyńskiPANTOMIMA WROCŁAWSKA: HENRYK TOMASZEWSKI, undated Archival B&W photograph, print ca. mid 1970sFramed dimensions
48.5 x 38,5 cm
19.1 x 15.1 inches -
Chris NashMichael Clark in publicity shot for "Heterospective", 1989B&W performance photograph36 x 48 cm
14.17 x 18.9 inches -
Hugo GlendinningMichael Clark, "mmm...", 1992B&W performance photograph36 x 48 cm
14.17 x 18.9 inches -
Nicholas GrafiaJosephine IV (NY is Killing Me), 2019Acrylics and colorant on Canvas150 x 130 cm
59.1 x 51.2 inches -
Jimmy De SanaCoyote, 1980Vintage C-printFramed Dimensions:
69 x 54 x 4 cm / 27.2 x 21.3 x 1.6 inches -
Krzysztof JungUntitled, 19752 B&W photographs printed in 2020, Hahnemuhle Photo Rag Baryta 315 gsm paper31.6 x 43,8 cm
12.44 x 17.24 inchesEdition 1/7, 3 AP -
Krzysztof JungVisual and Non-Visual Aspects of Space, 1975 (32 color slides)Self-Portrait, 1975 (1 color slide)Untitled, 1975 (4 byw slides)
-
Mikołaj SobczakThe Cafeteria, 2019Acrylic on canvas125 x 200 cm
49.2 x 78.7 inches -
Mikołaj SobczakThe Boat, 2019Acrylic on canvas125 x 200 cm
49.2 x 78.7 inches -
Liliane LijnQueen of Hearts and Queen of Diamonds, 1980Optical glass, prism, aluminium227 x 185 x 185 cm
89.4 x 72.8 x 72.8 inches -
Jimmy De SanaMarker Cones, 1982C-printFramed dimensions:
51,6 x 68,3 cm / 203.2 x 268.9 inchesEdition of 5, 1 -
Duggie FieldsMetaphysical Leg-Pull, 1976Acrylic on canvas183 x 183 cm
72.05 x 72.05 inches -
Hannah HöchEntartet, 1969Collage34 x 40.5 cm
13.4 x 15.9 inches -
Zoe LeonardIolo Carew, shaving his legs, 1981/2012Silver Gelatine Print33,3 x 45 cm
13.1 x 17.7 inchesEdition 2/6 -
Karolina JabłońskaMedusa, 2019Oil on CanvasSigned and dated verso- lower right corner190 x 170 cm
74.8 x 66.9 inches -
Duggie FieldsThe Ambivalence of Nature, 1982Acrylic on canvas183 x 206 cm
72.1 x 81.1 inches -
Jimmy De SanaSweatshirts, c.1980-1982Vintage C-print39,4 x 59,7 cm
15.5 x 23.5 inchesAP, -
Nicholas GrafiaAt the Gym II (Selfportrait in a Bathrobe), 2017Acrylics, gouache, indian ink, oil and spray on canvas150 x 125 cm
59.1 x 51.2 inches -
Federico García LorcaLa Barraca, 1932Film2:37 min, no sound
-
Kazimierz WiśniakTheater Poster of a Frederico Garcia Lorca play: “Evening in the Theater”, Stettin (Based on “Barbarous Nights. Legends and Plays from the Little Theatre”?), 2016poster96.3 x 67.8 cm
37.91 x 26.69 inches -
Lucia MoholyBauhauskapelle, 1925/26Silver Gelatin print on postcardFramed dimensions:
31 x 41 x 4 cm
12.2 x 16.1 x 1.5 inches -
Tadeusz KantorThe Dead Class, 1975vintage poster84.5 x 60 cm
33.3 x 23.6 inches -
Mikołaj SobczakVanguard, 2020Ceramic30.5 x 30,5 x 16 cm
12 x 12 x 6.3 inches -
Mikołaj SobczakThe Teachers, 2020Ceramic30.5 x 30.5 x 16 cm
12 x 12 x 6.3 inches -
Robert AntonUntitled, 1973Ink on paperDated lower left "April 1973"Image Dimensions:
32.26 x 24,13 cm / 12.7 x 9.5 inches
Framed Dimensions:
44 x 36.3 cm / 17.32 x 14.29 inches -
Wanda CzelkowskaSelf Portrait, early 1970sphotograph100 x 74 cm
39.37 x 29.13 inches -
Robert Anton"Elizabeth I". Broadway musical stage and costume design, 1973, 1980Pencil on vellumInitialed recto lower left "RA", dated recto lower right "JUNE 80". Anton dated the drawings in 1980. The play did not go on stageFramed dimensions:
44,5 x 50,8 cm
17 1/2 x 20 inches -
Robert AntonUntitled, 1979Pencil on vellumDated and initialed verso lower center "RA JULY 1979"Framed dimensions:
41 x 35,6 cm
16 1/8 x 14 inches -
Robert AntonUntitled, late 1970s/1980Pencil on vellumSigned recto lower left "Robert Anton"Framed dimensions:
63,5 x 59,1 cm
25 x 23 1/4 inches -
Robert AntonFinal Selection Prokofiev's Romeo + Juliet, 1973Graphite and felt tipped pen on paperTitled recto top left "Final Selection Prokofiev's Romeo + Juliet", dated recto lower left "November 27, 1973Image Dimensions:
22,86 × 30,5 cm / 9 × 12 inches
Framed Dimensions:
36.5 x 44 cm / 14.4 x 17.3 inches -
Robert AntonMay 1971, 1971Ballpoint pen on paperDated recto lower right "May 1971"Image Dimensions:
27,94 x 21,59 cm / 11 x 8.5 inches
Framed Dimensions:
41 x 32,8 cm / 16.14 x 12.9 inches -
Robert AntonDecember 29, 1973, 1973Watercolor on paperDated recto lower center "December 29, 1973"Image Dimensions:
22.86 x 30.48 cm / 9 x 12 inches
Framed Dimensions:
36.3 x 44 cm / 14.3 x 17.3 inches -
Robert AntonOctober 3, 1973, 1973Ballpoint pen on paperDated recto top left "October 3, 1973"Image Dimensions:
22,86 x 30,48 cm / 9 x 12 inches
Framed Dimensions:
36.3 x 44 cm / 14.3 x 17.3 inches -
Robert AntonSelf-Portrait, January 9, 1974, 1974Graphite on paperDated "January 9, 1974"Image Dimensions:
27,31 x 35,56 cm / 10.75 x 14 inches
Framed Dimensions:
40,8 x 48,8 cm / 16 x 19.2 inches -
Robert AntonJanuary 15, 1974, 1974Charcoal on paperDated recto lower right "January 15, 1974"Image Dimensions:
27,94 x 35,56 cm / 11 x 14 inches
Framed Dimensions:
40,8 x 48,8 cm / 16 x 19.2 inches -
Robert AntonFebruary 12, 1974, 1974Felt tip pen on paperDated recto lower left "February 12, 1974"cm
27.94 x 35,56 cm / 11 x 14 inches -
Robert AntonBefore Peter Brook Came, 1973Graphite on paperTitled and dated lower left "October 5, 1973 before Peter Brook came"22,86 x 30,48 cm / 9 x 12 inches
-
Robert AntonRobert Anton Theatre collectionMixed mediaVariable dimensions