Sigmar Polke

 

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Sigmar Polke was born in Oels/Schlesien, Poland in 1941 and studied art at the Staatliche Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf under Joseph Beuys between 1961 and 1967. Polke first gained notoriety in 1963 alongside fellow student Gerhard Richter with their exhibition "Capital Realism." Polke’s work with old prints, news photos, and comic characters has always set his work apart, politically and emotionally, both from American and British Pop Art, and from his German contemporaries.

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Sigmar Polke was born in Oels/Schlesien, Poland in 1941 and studied art at the Staatliche Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf under Joseph Beuys between 1961 and 1967. Now considered one of the most important figures in post-war German art, Polke first gained notoriety in 1963 alongside fellow student Gerhard Richter with their exhibition “Capital Realism”. This work was seen as a revolt against the then prevalent "Art Informel". Polke’s subsequent eclecticism has been viewed as reconstruction and subversion of content and technique, a critique of conventions.

Polke experimented with a multitude of mediums and varying styles, but perhaps one of the most distinguishing features of his work is the use of the benda dot – newsprint-style dots recognizable also in the works of American Pop artists Roy Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol. In what some critics see as an European variant of Pop Art, Polke took the imagery and slogans of an emergent consumer society and transposed them – with wit, playful irony and candor. While the American artists used the dots uniformly and mechanically to underline the theme of mass consumerism, Polke created them individually to ridicule the idea of mass production. Also unlike his American contemporaries, Polke often distorts or disrupts the ready-made iconography and parodies politics, social conventions, and established artistic and cultural values.

Polke’s work with old prints, news photos, and comic characters has always set his work apart, politically and emotionally, both from American and British Pop Art, and from his German contemporaries. Alongside his prolific output as a painter, Polke has assembled a huge and innovative body of photographic work, not only as source material for his painting but as an independent area of creativity.

In photography, painting, and drawing, with a stubborn reluctance to be confined by categories or limitations of media, Polke has forged a career of wide range. He is considered one of the most important and influential figures in the art scene today.

 

 

He passed away on  June 11, 2010, Cologne, Germany

 

 

Biography


1941  Born in Oels, Silesia, (now Poland)

1945 Family moved to Thuringia, East Germany

1953 Emigrated to West Germany, settled in Düsseldorf

1959-60 Apprenticed as a glass painter

1961-67 Studied at the Staatliche Kunstakademie, Düsseldorf

1963 Exhibition with Gerhard Richter. Co-founded "Capitalist Realism" with him

1972 Documenta, Kassel

1975 Prize for Painting, Saõ Paulo Biennale

1978 Moved to Cologne

1983 Restrospective exhibition at Kunsthalle, Bonn

1986 Grand Prize for Painting, Venice Biennale

1988 Grand Exhibition, Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville, Paris

1991 Professor at the Academy of Modern Art, Hamburg

1991-92 First Grand Retrospective Exhibition in USA

1994 Private exhibition in Tokyo.

1995  Exhibition, Tate Gallery Liverpool, UK.
Carnegie Prize, USA

1998 Group Exhibition, the Museum of Modern Art, Gunma, Japan

1999 Exhibition "Works on Paper 1963-74", Museum of Modern Art, New York

2002

Awarded the Praemium Imperiale Prize for Painting, the Japan Art Association, Tokyo


2005-06

Solo Exhibition "Alice in Wonderland" at the Ueno Royal Museum, Tokyo and the National Museum of Art, Osaka, Japan

 


2009

Completed 12 windows for the Grossmünster Zurich cathedral, Switzerland


2010

Died June 11, Cologne, Germany