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Venue: KW Institute for Contemporary Art
Born 1944 in Heusweiler, DE – lives and works in Berlin, DE
Establishing herself amidst the tumultuous, hedonistic spirit of the West Berlin art scene in the late 1970s and early 1980s, Galli, like many of her contemporaries, rejected the austere visual language of conceptual art and embraced narrative forms and subjective experience. Fragmented objects, human limbs, and amorphous blobs are playfully melded together in her drawings and paintings.
As Thomas Deecke writes, “Her protagonists are figures of her overflowing imagination… they appear to be marked by the circumstances of life and their fates; they show themselves exposed to the injustices of life in often bold gestures and anatomically highly questionable contortions.” Galli’s recalcitrant figures—in the form of severed arms or legs—reveal a semiotic approach to everyday individual experiences, which oscillate between the poles of cheerfulness and horror, struggle and lust, and sexuality/desire and brutality.
Similar stories can also be found in her artist books—art catalogues that she cuts up and paints over, transforming them into unique objects. Galli determinedly blazed her own path within a generation dominated by the (male) painters of the New Fauves. Fundamental to her work are the physical and psychological torment of her figures and her agile intellectual play with literature and language.
In Turbasky (1987) the artist’s own handprints, smeared in red paint, add a macabre dimension to two bodies entwined in what looks like an embrace. The thrashing about of hands and feet in their untitled work from 1989 suggests a scene that could be sexual or violent—or both. The selection of works on display pays homage to an artist, activist, and beloved art professor whose pioneering work and life has not been duly acknowledged within conventional art historical narratives.
Michèle Faguet
Touching Feeling. Affect, Pedagogy, Performativity
Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick
Monograph
Grupo Experimental de Cine en acción
Gabriel Peluffo
Drawing
II: La Solidaridad va Más Allá de un Concepto. Entre las Curadoras de la XI Berlin Biennale
Lisette Lagnado, Agustín Pérez Rubio
Conversation
A Moment of True Decolonization / Episode #6: Sinthujan Varatharajah. Constructing the Tamil Eelam State
The Funambulist / Sinthujan Varatharajah
Podcast
IV: How Fear Can Dismantle a Body. Vis-a-Vis with two of four curators of the 11th Berlin Biennale
María Berríos, Lisette Lagnado
Conversation
Undocumented Rumours and Disappearing Acts from Chile
María Berríos
Essay
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Venue: KW Institute for Contemporary Art
Born 1944 in Heusweiler, DE – lives and works in Berlin, DE
Establishing herself amidst the tumultuous, hedonistic spirit of the West Berlin art scene in the late 1970s and early 1980s, Galli, like many of her contemporaries, rejected the austere visual language of conceptual art and embraced narrative forms and subjective experience. Fragmented objects, human limbs, and amorphous blobs are playfully melded together in her drawings and paintings.
As Thomas Deecke writes, “Her protagonists are figures of her overflowing imagination… they appear to be marked by the circumstances of life and their fates; they show themselves exposed to the injustices of life in often bold gestures and anatomically highly questionable contortions.” Galli’s recalcitrant figures—in the form of severed arms or legs—reveal a semiotic approach to everyday individual experiences, which oscillate between the poles of cheerfulness and horror, struggle and lust, and sexuality/desire and brutality.
Similar stories can also be found in her artist books—art catalogues that she cuts up and paints over, transforming them into unique objects. Galli determinedly blazed her own path within a generation dominated by the (male) painters of the New Fauves. Fundamental to her work are the physical and psychological torment of her figures and her agile intellectual play with literature and language.
In Turbasky (1987) the artist’s own handprints, smeared in red paint, add a macabre dimension to two bodies entwined in what looks like an embrace. The thrashing about of hands and feet in their untitled work from 1989 suggests a scene that could be sexual or violent—or both. The selection of works on display pays homage to an artist, activist, and beloved art professor whose pioneering work and life has not been duly acknowledged within conventional art historical narratives.
Michèle Faguet
Undocumented Rumours and Disappearing Acts from Chile
María Berríos
Essay
A Moment of True Decolonization / Episode #6: Sinthujan Varatharajah. Constructing the Tamil Eelam State
The Funambulist / Sinthujan Varatharajah
Podcast
Maternidades subversivas
María Llopis
Monograph
Expresiones de la locura: el arte de los enfermos mentales
Hans Prinzhorn
Monograph
#fight4rojava
Graffiti
New Look
Flávio de Carvalho
Performance
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Venue: KW Institute for Contemporary Art
Born 1944 in Heusweiler, DE – lives and works in Berlin, DE
Establishing herself amidst the tumultuous, hedonistic spirit of the West Berlin art scene in the late 1970s and early 1980s, Galli, like many of her contemporaries, rejected the austere visual language of conceptual art and embraced narrative forms and subjective experience. Fragmented objects, human limbs, and amorphous blobs are playfully melded together in her drawings and paintings.
As Thomas Deecke writes, “Her protagonists are figures of her overflowing imagination… they appear to be marked by the circumstances of life and their fates; they show themselves exposed to the injustices of life in often bold gestures and anatomically highly questionable contortions.” Galli’s recalcitrant figures—in the form of severed arms or legs—reveal a semiotic approach to everyday individual experiences, which oscillate between the poles of cheerfulness and horror, struggle and lust, and sexuality/desire and brutality.
Similar stories can also be found in her artist books—art catalogues that she cuts up and paints over, transforming them into unique objects. Galli determinedly blazed her own path within a generation dominated by the (male) painters of the New Fauves. Fundamental to her work are the physical and psychological torment of her figures and her agile intellectual play with literature and language.
In Turbasky (1987) the artist’s own handprints, smeared in red paint, add a macabre dimension to two bodies entwined in what looks like an embrace. The thrashing about of hands and feet in their untitled work from 1989 suggests a scene that could be sexual or violent—or both. The selection of works on display pays homage to an artist, activist, and beloved art professor whose pioneering work and life has not been duly acknowledged within conventional art historical narratives.
Michèle Faguet
IV: How Fear Can Dismantle a Body. Vis-a-Vis with two of four curators of the 11th Berlin Biennale
María Berríos, Lisette Lagnado
Conversation
Feminist Health Care Research Group
Web archive
I: Junto a las curadoras de la XI Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art
Renata Cervetto, Lisette Lagnado
Conversation
Undocumented Rumours and Disappearing Acts from Chile
María Berríos
Essay
„Klaus Eckschen: Hörspiel“
Die Remise
Hörspiel
Fragments of the Artist’s Diary, Berlin 11.2019–1.2020
Virginia de Medeiros
Diary
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Venue: KW Institute for Contemporary Art
Born 1944 in Heusweiler, DE – lives and works in Berlin, DE
Establishing herself amidst the tumultuous, hedonistic spirit of the West Berlin art scene in the late 1970s and early 1980s, Galli, like many of her contemporaries, rejected the austere visual language of conceptual art and embraced narrative forms and subjective experience. Fragmented objects, human limbs, and amorphous blobs are playfully melded together in her drawings and paintings.
As Thomas Deecke writes, “Her protagonists are figures of her overflowing imagination… they appear to be marked by the circumstances of life and their fates; they show themselves exposed to the injustices of life in often bold gestures and anatomically highly questionable contortions.” Galli’s recalcitrant figures—in the form of severed arms or legs—reveal a semiotic approach to everyday individual experiences, which oscillate between the poles of cheerfulness and horror, struggle and lust, and sexuality/desire and brutality.
Similar stories can also be found in her artist books—art catalogues that she cuts up and paints over, transforming them into unique objects. Galli determinedly blazed her own path within a generation dominated by the (male) painters of the New Fauves. Fundamental to her work are the physical and psychological torment of her figures and her agile intellectual play with literature and language.
In Turbasky (1987) the artist’s own handprints, smeared in red paint, add a macabre dimension to two bodies entwined in what looks like an embrace. The thrashing about of hands and feet in their untitled work from 1989 suggests a scene that could be sexual or violent—or both. The selection of works on display pays homage to an artist, activist, and beloved art professor whose pioneering work and life has not been duly acknowledged within conventional art historical narratives.
Michèle Faguet
Undocumented Rumours and Disappearing Acts from Chile
María Berríos
Essay
Feminist Health Care Research Group
Web archive
Struggle as Culture: The Museum of Solidarity, 1971–73
María Berríos
Essay
Touching Feeling. Affect, Pedagogy, Performativity
Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick
Monograph
Teatro da Vertigem
Monograph
Flávio de Carvalho: Fazenda Capuava
Archive of Lisette Lagnado
Photographs
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.