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Solo show: Pia Dehne - I´m So Happy I Could Die (over)

16 December 2002 until 24 January 2003
  Pia Dehne - I´m So Happy I Could Die
Pia Dehne "Yo and his brother" graphite on paper 70 x 65 cm 2002
 
  Laura Mars Grp.

Laura Mars Grp.
Sorauer Str. 3
10997 Berlin
Germany (city map)

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tel +49 - (0)30 - 610 74 630
www.lauramars.de


“I’m so happy I could die” is Pia Dehne’s first exhibition consisting exclusively of drawings. Influenced both by Classic German Modernism and the “ultra-brutal” style of the Italian artist Tanino Liberatore’s “Rank Xerox” comics, Dehne, born in 1964, has captured over two years’ worth of transitory images from her everyday life: eighty drawings based on snapshots which, taken together, could make up an associative “diary.” Situated between a personal approach and a formal distance, Dehne sketches urban life in New York and Berlin, characterized as it is by a longing for ecstasy as well as by superficiality. The fleeting moment of total happiness is so beautiful that one could just die: in reference to the song title of a Japanese punk rock band, Dehne’s drawing series unites a variety of contradictory attitudes. “I’m so happy I could die” is both an authentic testimony and a stylistic construct that, not entirely without irony, cites the myths of the art establishment as well as the club scene. Regardless of whether Dehne’s drawings depict an electro girl band, people gathered at an art opening, cowboys in Wyoming, the deejay Westbam, Andreas Gursky’s photographs, or a bartender somewhere in downtown Manhattan – the autobiographical tenor of these works is always accompanied by the basic character of the represented subject. In the social web Dehne portrays in “I’m so happy I could die,” the differences among VIPs, friends, and strangers can no longer be clearly discerned. Absolute democracy reigns in her series of images: profession, social status, race, and sex play no evident role here; nor does a unifying drawing style. It almost seems as though not only the mood, but also the signature of each drawing changes according to the respective encounter, although references to George Grosz and Tom of Finland can also be detected. The trip Dehne takes with “I’m so happy I could die” – through various scenes and milieux on both sides of the Atlantic – implies a journey through various cultural forms, without separating “high” from “low.” Her drawing series clings to an anarchic hope: that the greatest possible beauty attainable by a given state simultaneously signifies its end.

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