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Wolfgang Tillmans: “Concrete Column”

"Concrete Column" continues Tillmans's lifelong practice of sharing moments hinging on the zeitgeist and his love of astronomical connections. The exhibit ranges from his early work of social interaction and worldly discoveries to recent images of concrete pouring, bridging his observation of the transmutation of states of matter. This pictorial survey is further exemplified with images of photochemical reactions and eclipses, among others.

 

Speaking to a room full of attentive eyes, Tillmans elaborates on his journey as an artist and the chapters connecting ideas and modes of creation. Asked about the parallels of moon cycles and the cycles of his career, the artist states, "I feel my work develops in evolution rather than revolution, and I'm grateful for that. That I never felt that I had to break this in order to move on. Usually, when I feel like, 'Oh wow, I'm onto something new,' I develop it further and then realize I was in that headspace ten years ago." 
 

Marking his 8th show at Regen Projects, Tillmans utilizes the entire gallery embellishing every wall with work that stretches from his adolescent years of photographing eclipses to familiar scenes of dinner outings and intimate moments. Other images center architecture, landscapes, abstractions, and a revisited photo of San Francisco in the 90s. Having the ability to speak to the complexities of society and the natural world has been one of Tillmans's strengths, creating work that elicits tender sensibilities and occasional goosebumps. Located in the back of the gallery sits a listening room where viewers have the opportunity to not only listen to his debut album but watch visuals contextualizing each track. 

Compiled of field recording, jam sessions, and studio productions, Tillmans assembled a debut album representing his artist range. Over three years, the multi-hyphenate has approached music in similar ways as his image-making. "I don't photograph in one way, and everything goes through the same levels of production. In my exhibitions, there's something that seems very fleeting, but maybe it was highly produced, and there's something that looks highly complicated, but it may have been just a fleeting moment and the varying degrees of staged and unstaged. All of that I actually really like and sound. This summer, I came back to bring those different elements together and mix them, not in a DJ kind of way, but connect them, weave them together," Tillman explains. Preparing for a monumental show at the Museum of Modern Art in New York beginning September 2022, the German artist continues to carve out his legacy.


Check out Wolfgang Tillmans's latest exhibition, "Concrete Column," at Regen Projects in Los Angeles, from November 6 through December 23, 3021. 

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