Ohne Titel

2009 - Painting (Painting)

53 x 62 x 5 cm

Matti Braun


During a residency in 2009 at L’appartement 22 in Rabat, the artist traveled in Morocco and Senegal on the traces of the German sculptor Arno Breker. On this occasion he learned about batik, a fabric printing technique which originates not only from Indonesia but also from Senegal. It is also widespread in Africa. The artist was inspired by the printed motifs to make a series of batiks, Untitled, on which the white on black motifs recall European geometric abstraction. By re-appropriating these handcrafted traditional techniques (batik, Japanese ink and wash, blown glass, woodcuts, painting on ceramic…) Matti Braun displaces their usage and their context at the same time and reveals the porousness between different cultures that interpenetrate. Thus the artist aims to shed troubled light on different histories by operating these correspondences between forms and past knowledge, present and future.


Matti Braun’s work entails research and experienced wanderings during sojourns and journeys. He explores heterogeneous data. Their junction generates rapports with other geographic and cultural eras, sometimes in anachronistic ways. Matti Braun is interested in different cultures and particularly in the multiple physical and conceptual migrations they have experienced. The creative process results in in-depth research regarding the interpretations about these different cultures. The images and the forms are utilized in a narrative while maintaining an enigmatic dimension. Matti Braun was born in Berlin in 1968. He lives and works in Cologne, Germany.


Colors:



Related works found in the same semantic group  
» see more

10 Things You Should Know About: Batik
© » ARTS EQUATOR

10 Things You Should Know About: Batik | ArtsEquator Skip to content In the latest episode of our popular 10 Things You Should Know series, we share facts about batik, a fabric popular in Southeast Asia...

Weekly Picks: Indonesia (1 – 7 October 2018)
© » ARTS EQUATOR

Weekly Picks: Indonesia (1 - 7 October 2018) | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Weekly To Do October 1, 2018 Top Picks of Indonesia art events in Bali, Yogyakarta and Bandung from 1-7 October 2018 Have you ever wondered where does inspiration come from? Cata Odata curated Scattered Trails as an attempt to trace the origin of Inspiration by showcasing records of an artistic encounter between Gus Punia and Philippe Janssens, 2 visual artists who came from different cultural backgrounds and generations...

Weekly Southeast Asia Radar: The animated short ‘Batik Girl’; Manila’s “casserole pot”
© » ARTS EQUATOR

Weekly Southeast Asia Radar: The animated short 'Batik Girl'; Manila's "casserole pot" | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Radar Batik Girl FB November 21, 2019 ArtsEquator’s Southeast Asia Radar features articles and posts about arts and culture in Southeast Asia, drawn from local and regional websites and publications – aggregated content from outside sources, so we are exposed to a multitude of voices in the region...

Ena de Silva House by Geoffrey Bawa is a remarkable preservation story
© » WALLPAPER*

Tour Geoffrey Bawa’s Ena de Silva House in Sri Lanka | Wallpaper At Ena de Silva house, each brick, roof tile and pebblestone was numbered before being transported to the new location and reinstalled in their exact original position (Image credit: Teardrop Hotels) By Daven Wu published 11 February 2024 In 1960, when Ena de Silva and her husband Osmund were casting about for an architect to build their family home on a small plot they’d just bought in Colombo, Sri Lanka, her friend, the landscaper Bevis Bawa, suggested his younger brother, Geoffrey, who had just started practising...