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Gehäuse IV Print

Hanjo Schmidt

Germany

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About The Artwork

Gehäuse, a housing, a core, an enclosure, a shell, a casing. Seen this way the head, the skull, whose outside is the face, is the most important house and home of the self. And this shell, this core, represents more than anything the mystery of the self. More than the communicating mode of the open eyes, the open mouth, the open face with its mimic. A very difficult question, a poser or stumper, in German we call a hard nut, not easy or even impossible to crack. There is no way to find out or get an answer. So in front of such head, closed as a shell, we have to be silent for it becomes mere guessing to speculate about what goes on inside. The pondering on what goes on inside this case started years ago with looking at my mother’s face, with not finding any answer. Alzheimer‘s had sealed this precious housing and thrown the key away. So in the end it needed my painting her face to at least coming a little bit closer. Without knowing though but with feeling and scenting.

Details & Dimensions

Print:Giclee on Fine Art Paper

Size:8 W x 10 H x 0.1 D in

Size with Frame:13.25 W x 15.25 H x 1.2 D in

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Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

Born in Germany.

Hanjo Schmidt works on the basis of photographs without actually copying them. He never gives the motif precedence over the process of painting in the way realism or, even more so photorealism does.
He paints in acrylic and often uses a cheap brush applying paint in rather crude, fast strokes. His style is loud and dominant, the colours are based on what you can see but are often carried to an extreme. These are expressive paintings, and the act of painting pushes so to speak, the motifs to the background. Not for one second is there any doubt that Hanjo Schmidts art is about painting, about applying colours to canvas.
The surprising thing is that even with these crude, raw brush strokes the model is defined in a perfectly precise way. Shining eyes, pupils with sharp contours, a sinewy neck or boney shoulder blades: everything is unambiguously defined, and yet this is a type of painting that does not attempt to create the illusion of a realistic one-to-one copy of the subject matter.
The fact that we can always clearly recognize the subject matter yet at the same time know we are actually looking at a painting is a contradiction that is the real challenge in the works of Hanjo Schmidt.
As you all know, we are constantly confronted by images that want to seduce. Whether they are advertisements, posters or other media images, the majority of the motifs are designed to be grasped quickly. The message is intended to be decoded in an instant and then remembered. Hanjo Schmidts paintings, on the other hand, resist the merely consuming eye. The faces disintegrate into individual sections, or units. The paintings develope a life of their own, formatating subtexts, establishing networks, seas of color and dancing lines. This is somewhat disturbing and irritating, and forces the viewer to dwell on the picture and to take their time to get to know it. Instead of fast consumption you have to pause and dedicate yourself to seeing.
What is more, Hanjo Schmidt exaggerates expressively what he sees in contrast to the smoothing-out of commercial pictures with the help of Photoshop. He emphasizes and underlines everything the cosmetic industry would try to hide. These faces are not normed or standardised but belong to individuals. Thus Hanjo Schmidts paintings are the departure from the smooth evenness of the beautiful facade to the core of the human being in their essence..

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