Solo Show: Everything Belongs to the Cosmos at carlier | gebauer, Berlin

Everything Belongs to the Cosmos.
carlier | gebauer
Berlin, Germany
November 22, 2024 – January 11, 2025
https://www.carliergebauer.com/exhibition/everything-belongs-to-the-cosmos/

carlier | gebauer, Berlin, is pleased to announce Alexandra Grant’s first solo show with the gallery, Everything Belongs to the Cosmos.

 

Alexandra Grant, Everything Belongs to the Cosmos, exhibition view at carlier | gebauer, Berlin, 2024. Courtesy of the artist and carlier | gebauer, Berlin/Madrid. Photo © Andrea Rossetti

Everything Belongs to the Cosmos is an installation of painted works by Los Angeles and Berlin-based painter Alexandra Grant based on texts by Polish writers and poets Anna Adamowicz, Krystyna Dąbrowska, Julia Fiedorczuk, Bianka Rolando, Olga Tokarczuk, and Urszula Zajączkowska. Begun in 2021, the work is designed to create a chapel for reflection and space for hope, following in the rich tradition of contemplative chapel spaces created by artists as diverse as Henri Matisse, Mark Rothko, Ilise Greenstein and Theaster Gates. The six participating writers and poets were chosen and commissioned in 2021 and early 2022 with the assistance of Marcin Orliński and the contributed work was translated from Polish into English by Antonia Lloyd-Jones.

Alexandra Grant, Everything Belongs to the Cosmos, exhibition view at carlier | gebauer, Berlin, 2024. Courtesy of the artist and carlier | gebauer, Berlin/Madrid. Photo © Andrea Rossetti

The curiosity that drives Grant’s career is in literary texts and making them visual. Since 2014, her work has revolved around Sophocles’ myth of Antigone, interpreting her utterance “I was born to love not to hate.” She has painted Antigone’s voice with drawn lines (to represent the rule of law) and bright pours of paint (which capture the chaos of life). In Neunte Universum (Ninth Universe), 2020, painted and exhibited in Berlin in 2021 at carlier | gebauer gallery, her Antigone series expanded to include the universe itself. This painting was technically and culturally a springboard for Everything Belongs to the Cosmos.

The Polish writers and poets featured in Grant’s painted Cosmos span generations and levels of recognition, with Tokarczuk the winner of the 2019 Nobel Prize in Literature and are meant to highlight the current writing scene in Poland as each interprets an aspect of the cosmos. Taking each writer’s text as a cue, Grant created one large-scale painting based on each text in English, each on paper and at a scale of 3.9 meter tall and 3 meter wide or larger, the largest works she has ever created. The installation of the six paintings is meant to create a chapel space — and quite literally a cosmos — for and of women’s voices.

Alexandra Grant Darkness, Cosmos IV, after Bianka Rolando’s “Ciemność,” 2022), 2024 from the series Everything Belongs to the Cosmos. Silk screen, colored pencil, acrylic paint, acrylic ink and sumi ink on paper, 390 x 300 cm. Courtesy of the artist and carlier | gebauer, Berlin/Madrid. Photo © Andrea Rossetti
Alexandra Grant Orbit, Cosmos I, (after Anna Adamowicz’s “orbita,” 2022), 2024, from the series Everything Belongs to the Cosmos. Silk screen, colored pencil, acrylic paint, acrylic ink and sumi ink on paper, 390 x 300 cm. Courtesy of the artist and carlier | gebauer, Berlin/Madrid. Photo © Andrea Rossetti
Alexandra Grant Matter, Cosmos III, after Julia Fiedorczuk’s “materia,” 2022), 2024 from the series Everything Belongs to the Cosmos. Silk screen, colored pencil, acrylic paint, acrylic ink and sumi ink on paper, 390 x 300 cm. Courtesy of the artist and carlier | gebauer, Berlin/Madrid. Photo © Andrea Rossetti
Alexandra Grant The Spark, Cosmos V, (excerpted from Olga Tokarczuk’s, “Prowadź swój pług przez kości umarłych” 2009), 2024 from the series Everything Belongs to the Cosmos. Silk screen, colored pencil, acrylic paint, acrylic ink and sumi ink on paper, 390 x 450 cm. Courtesy of the artist and carlier | gebauer, Berlin/Madrid. Photo © Andrea Rossetti

Engaging the community of Polish writers and poets during the pandemic, the Ukraine war and refugee crisis, as well as the changing political circumstances for women in Poland has allowed for cross-cultural exchange and opens a conversation around the purpose of and hope that writing, art-making, reflection and community can bring. By commissioning the writers and poets and having their work translated to English by Antonia Lloyd-Jones, Grant’s aim is “to further translate their words into the visible and visual.”

The title of the exhibition captures both a sense of wonder and a surrender to reality and circumstances, which allows for a transcendence of material conditions. Everything Belongs to the Cosmos is a safe haven: a place for reflection and hope, both part of and apart from the chaos of the world.

Grant’s interest in Polish literature began over 20 years ago, when she first read Wislawa Szymborska’s work and embarked on representing the poem “Possibilities” as a drawing without paper, made out of wire, in 2001. These sculptures and works stemming from them are now the subject of a solo show at the Adam Mickiewicz Museum of Literature in Warsaw, Poland, Alexandra Grant. Word. Image. Space, a survey of her work that presents a long-term interest in Polish literature and experimental writing, focusing on works inspired by Szymborska and Michael Joyce.

A public conversation lead by Lloyd Jones and Orliński, featuring Adamowicz, Dąbrowska, Fiedorczuk, and Rolando will take place on November 23rd at 4pm.

A bilingual catalog of Everything Belongs to the Cosmos will be released in January 2025. The book will include an essay by Orliński, as well as the texts by the six Polish writers and poets.

Alexandra Grant Everything Belongs to the Cosmos, 2024 from the series Everything Belongs to the Cosmos. Silk screen, colored pencil, acrylic paint, acrylic ink and sumi ink on paper, 528 x 300 cm. Courtesy of the artist and carlier | gebauer, Berlin/Madrid. Photo © Andrea Rossetti

The large-scale paper for the project was provided by Hahnemühle FineArt.

carlier | gebauer, Berlin
Markgrafenstraße 67
D-10969 Berlin

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