Titel Media Sites highsnobiety.com highsnobette.com selectism.com curatedmag.com radcollector.com

Columns
Benny Gold
Elias is back with another episode of Feeding The Streets. This time he is ...
Read more
Commonwealth
Come see the Commonwealth F/W 2012 Collection at Capsule Show in Las Vegas next ...
Read more
Todd Shimabuku
Next Monday Magic starts and just wanted to Thank Crooked, Neva and Jaz at ...
Read more
Frank The Butcher
The 'More Fiya' series continues with part 2! Jack Frost puts together more ...
Read more
Stalley
Here is a preview of my new project, Savage Journey to the American Dream, ...
Read more
Village Slum/Mel D. Cole
PICS! Not Really Nude. Pt 20. W/ Lafayette, Co-starring: Stephanie & Nastasia. ...
Read more
Features
Patta once again ventured out to produce a collaboration shoe with Asics. For Holiday 2011 they ...
Read more
In our latest feature shoot, Berlin based photographer Alex Flach takes a closer look at the second ...
Read more
Ever since ruffling the feathers of the music industry a little less than a year ago, hip-hop ...
Read more
Posts tagged ‘oliver rodriguez-kroll “zirkus stalin zirkus ’

Oliver Rodriguez-Kroll “Zirkus Stalin Zirkus Hollywood”

11 August 2008, 05.46 | Posted in Art | No comments »

highsnobiety - oliver rodriguez-kroll
The painter Oliver Rodriguez-Kroll is primarily concerned with the darker sides of human existence – with both individual, relatively innocuous pain as well as with the limitless frenzy pervading the history of humanity. Stories of perpetrators, victims, followers…

Looking to artistically de-demonise the day-to-day madness, Oliver Rodriguez-Kroll constantly uncovers new findings: ranging from storm troopers out of the Star Wars saga (of which he had, as a child, gathered up to 300 plastic figurines in his room) to antique tin soldiers, disused lifestyle magazines and faded posters.
All of these are a source of inspiration, templates or material for collages; they prompt him to counter the pervading contemporary banalisation of social issues with irony.

Simultaneously, certain pieces are a consciously naive way of dealing with traumatising experiences, be they his own or someone else’s, so as to make them more bearable, both for himself and for the observer.

Simple colours and shapes dominate these paintings and collages. Rather than to exude the stress experienced, the large, yet discreet pieces convey a feeling of calm and order.

Oliver Rodriguez-Kroll was born in 1971 in Hamburg. He has been living and working in Berlin since 1999 after several years in London and Paris.

“Zirkus Stalin Zirkus Hollywood” opens this week at Pool Gallery, and runs until September 13.
Read more



LatestPostsTagsMost popular posts
Masthead
Editors
Features Editor
Nick Schonberger
Staff Photographer
Jacob Breinholt