Toby Ziegler's Spontaneous Gestures Collide with Acts That Abstract & Render Simultaneously @ Galerie Max Hetzler in Paris

Toby Ziegler's fourth solo exhibition at Galerie Max Hetzler, Blind men exploring the skin of an elephant, brings together a range of recent works exploring the connections between figuration and abstraction, control and intuition, and manual and digital means of production. The disruption of established systems and the troubling fractures at play within the circulation of images are central themes in the artist’s recent production.

The title of the exhibition refers to an old Indian parable, transcribed in the work of Hokusai, in which blind men are depicted petting different parts of an elephant, each believing it to be another distinct animal. The tale relates to the idea that each person defends their own belief as being absolute, based on their own limited subjectivity, regardless of the experience of others. To imagine the animal objectively, as a whole, would only be possible by merging these various perceptions.

In Ziegler’s work, the original image springs out of a similar disorder, with figurative elements and motifs subtracted, aggregated or enhanced via personal references. As in the Indian fable, multiple small, distinct elements are united to form one coherent whole. Ziegler’s creative process is sometimes one of incremental ‘figuration’ and sometimes one of abstraction, with different starting points but the same destination. His aim is to make work that self-consciously functions as both figurative and abstract at the same time. It involves the dismantling and deconstruction of imagery drawn from a variety of sources, adding or subtracting elements such as figurative details and patterns.

Blind men exploring the skin of an elephant is on view through July 29 at Galerie Max Hetzler Paris 46 & 57 Rue du Temple.

The Yellow Light at 6pm @ Galerie Max Hetzler

Left to right: Günther Förg, Vivian Suter
Installation view: Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin, 23 June – 19 August 2023
Courtesy the artists and Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin | Paris | London, Photo: def image 

Galerie Max Hetzler explodes into colorful, ethereal questioning with a group show featuring work by Darren Almond, Georg Baselitz, Glenn Brown, André Butzer, Sarah Crowner, Carroll Dunham, Hedwig Eberle, Ida Ekblad, Günther Förg, Katharina Grosse, Alex Israel, Melike Kara, Alex Katz, Friedrich Kunath, Beth Letain, Jake Longstreth, Tal R, David Salle, Julian Schnabel, David Schutter, Sean Scully, Ben Sledsens, Mònica Subidé, Vivian Suter, Liliane Tomasko, Tursic & Mille, Rinus Van de Velde, Grace Weaver, Emma Webster, and Toby Ziegler.

Despite Cézanne’s insistence that the world, with all its strangeness, only becomes present, comprehensible and recognizable in images, the onset of modernity initiated a disappearance of nature and landscape in the course of a rational logic of progress. Matisse, Munch or Klee were already only able to preserve them in pictorial form. With 30 individual views on landscape and nature, the group exhibition das gelbe Licht 6 Uhr nachmittags (the yellow light at 6pm) maps out the hazy mosaic of a frail present: whether as a melancholic reminiscence of man-made devastation, a stoic contemplation of the fragile fabric of everyday life or a daring invention of an uncertain future yet to come.

The work is largely without people. Yet, as the exhibition title, a line of poetry by the late Rolf Dieter Brinkmann suggests, we, looking and empathizing, are ourselves the missing human reference. For the question of how we want to fit into the world arises again and again.

the yellow light at 6pm (das gelbe Licht 6 Uhr nachmittags) is on view until August 19th at Galerie Max Hetzler, Bleibtreustraße 45, 10623 Berlin