Reduced structures, musical lightness Comte’s monochrome “interview paintings,” rendered in pastel colors—pink, mint green, and light blue—are covered with minimalist graphic line patterns: rhombuses, zigzags, circles, and serpentine lines reminiscent of winding mountain roads or racetracks. They could be cutting templates or reduced, almost architectural structures seen from a drone high in the sky or on a screen: lines across fields, circular basins or silos, or simply fragments of diagrams. At the same time, these images possess an almost musical lightness, evoking notations and compositions.
Interviews with prominent actors When you move closer, however, you notice bands of words from which sentences flash out: “We see the disappearance of species” or “Because I didn’t know what to do after getting a degree.” Within the geometric, ornamental patterns, these bands of text are repeatedly cut off, crossed, or twisted into circles, as if the words had no semantic content but were simply material from which lines and patterns are formed. In fact, the text material consists of excerpts from interviews that Comte conducted over fifteen years with prominent curators, including Hans Ulrich Obrist and Koyo Kouoh, the recently deceased artistic director of the Venice Biennale, as well as Cecilia Alemani, who directed the 2022 Biennale. The painting Cecilia in the exhibition is dedicated to her.
Images of networks The fact that the titles consist only of first names alludes to a habit within the art world of referring to internationally known figures by their first names alone in order to signal familiarity and insider knowledge—“of course, Hans Ulrich!” Comte’s images can therefore be read either as abstract portraits of these individuals or as representations of a network. These insider structures of the art world fit neatly into Comte’s minimalist cosmos, in which entire landscapes, trees, and plants are reduced and abstracted into patterns, waves, and icons.
Abstract language patterns Comte often works with sculptures in the landscape: smoothly polished wooden branch forms and concrete cacti, which she sometimes submerges in the sea, reducing them to an underwater desert. The shifting patterns that inspire her arise equally from nature and from a society shaped by digital experience, and she transforms them into environmental installations, some of them monumental in scale. Comte’s works address contemporary issues such as climate change, ecology, and global pollution. At the same time, they are frequently the result of meditative, artisanal, and conceptual processes in which the artist recycles materials and “translates” them into new formal contexts, much like these conversations from the ecosphere of art, which appear here as abstract language patterns.
Information
Reduced structures, musical lightness
Comte’s monochrome “interview paintings,” rendered in pastel colors—pink, mint green, and light blue—are covered with minimalist graphic line patterns: rhombuses, zigzags, circles, and serpentine lines reminiscent of winding mountain roads or racetracks. They could be cutting templates or reduced, almost architectural structures seen from a drone high in the sky or on a screen: lines across fields, circular basins or silos, or simply fragments of diagrams. At the same time, these images possess an almost musical lightness, evoking notations and compositions.
Interviews with prominent actors
When you move closer, however, you notice bands of words from which sentences flash out: “We see the disappearance of species” or “Because I didn’t know what to do after getting a degree.” Within the geometric, ornamental patterns, these bands of text are repeatedly cut off, crossed, or twisted into circles, as if the words had no semantic content but were simply material from which lines and patterns are formed. In fact, the text material consists of excerpts from interviews that Comte conducted over fifteen years with prominent curators, including Hans Ulrich Obrist and Koyo Kouoh, the recently deceased artistic director of the Venice Biennale, as well as Cecilia Alemani, who directed the 2022 Biennale. The painting Cecilia in the exhibition is dedicated to her.
Images of networks
The fact that the titles consist only of first names alludes to a habit within the art world of referring to internationally known figures by their first names alone in order to signal familiarity and insider knowledge—“of course, Hans Ulrich!” Comte’s images can therefore be read either as abstract portraits of these individuals or as representations of a network. These insider structures of the art world fit neatly into Comte’s minimalist cosmos, in which entire landscapes, trees, and plants are reduced and abstracted into patterns, waves, and icons.
Abstract language patterns
Comte often works with sculptures in the landscape: smoothly polished wooden branch forms and concrete cacti, which she sometimes submerges in the sea, reducing them to an underwater desert. The shifting patterns that inspire her arise equally from nature and from a society shaped by digital experience, and she transforms them into environmental installations, some of them monumental in scale. Comte’s works address contemporary issues such as climate change, ecology, and global pollution. At the same time, they are frequently the result of meditative, artisanal, and conceptual processes in which the artist recycles materials and “translates” them into new formal contexts, much like these conversations from the ecosphere of art, which appear here as abstract language patterns.
Audio
Note: The audio transcription is voiced by an AI.
Claudia Comte, Cecilia (interview painting), 2021
Acrylic on canvas, plexiglas plaque, coloured pencil on paper in plexiglass
© Claudia Comte. Photo: Conradin Frei
Written Art Collection
Further artworks from this exhibition
Intro into the exhibition
100
Intro into the exhibition
Lawrence Weiner, THE GRACE OF GESTURE, 2010
101
Lawrence Weiner, THE GRACE OF GESTURE, 2010
On Kawara, JUNE 1, 1967, 1967
102
On Kawara, JUNE 1, 1967, 1967
Chapter: wordsearch - Concept and Poetry
Karin Sander, wordsearch, 2002
103
Karin Sander, wordsearch, 2002
Chapter: wordsearch - Concept and Poetry
Etel Adnan, The Linden Tree Poems, 2019
104
Etel Adnan, The Linden Tree Poems, 2019
Chapter: wordsearch - Concept and Poetry
Natalie Czech, A poem by Repetition by Emmett Williams, 2013
105
Natalie Czech, A poem by Repetition by Emmett Williams, 2013
Chapter: wordsearch - Concept and Poetry
Herta Müller, Paper Collages, 2012
106
Herta Müller, Paper Collages, 2012
Chapter: wordsearch - Concept and Poetry
Marcel Dzama, Ulysses, 2009
107
Marcel Dzama, Ulysses, 2009
Chapter: Ulysses - Narration and Identity
Slavs and Tatars, Molla Nasreddin the antimodern, 2012
109
Slavs and Tatars, Molla Nasreddin the antimodern, 2012
Chapter: Ulysses - Narration and Identity
Yinka Shonibare CBE, The African Library Collection (Poets), 2022
110
Yinka Shonibare CBE, The African Library Collection (Poets), 2022
Chapter: Ulysses - Narration and Identity
Larissa Fassler, Regent Street/Regent's Park (Dickens thought it looked like a racetrack), 2009
111
Larissa Fassler, Regent Street/Regent's Park (Dickens thought it looked like a racetrack), 2009
Chapter: Map of Utopia - History, Cartography, Worlds Design
Joseph Beuys, Initiation Gauloise, 1976
112
Joseph Beuys, Initiation Gauloise, 1976
Chapter: Map of Utopia - History, Cartography, Worlds Design
Qiu Zhijie, 24 World Maps, 2015-2017
113
Qiu Zhijie, 24 World Maps, 2015-2017
Chapter: Map of Utopia - History, Cartography, Worlds Design
Agathe Snow, Walls, 2010
114
Agathe Snow, Walls, 2010
Chapter: Map of Utopia - History, Cartography, Worlds Design
William Kentridge, Anti-Mercator, 2010-2011 & Untitled, Drawing for Black Box / Chambre Noire, 2005
115
William Kentridge, Anti-Mercator, 2010-2011 & Untitled, Drawing for Black Box / Chambre Noire, 2005
Chapter: Map of Utopia - History, Cartography, Worlds Design
Meschac Gaba, Museum of Contemporary African Art in Berlin, 2014
116
Meschac Gaba, Museum of Contemporary African Art in Berlin, 2014
Chapter: Map of Utopia - History, Cartography, Worlds Design
Wong Hoy Cheong, Study for Colonies Bite Back, 2001
117
Wong Hoy Cheong, Study for Colonies Bite Back, 2001
Chapter: Map of Utopia - History, Cartography, Worlds Design
Ellen Gallagher, La Chinoise, 2008
118
Ellen Gallagher, La Chinoise, 2008
Chapter: Map of Utopia - History, Cartography, Worlds Design
Mounira Al Solh, His Funeral, Our Funeral, Their Funeral, 2023
120
Mounira Al Solh, His Funeral, Our Funeral, Their Funeral, 2023
Chapter: Home of My Eyes - Home and Exile
Shirin Neshat, Home of My Eyes, 2015
121
Shirin Neshat, Home of My Eyes, 2015
Chapter: Home of My Eyes - Home and Exile
Viviane Sassen, Code/Blue, 2019
122
Viviane Sassen, Code/Blue, 2019
Chapter: Small Right Hand Down - Democracy and Freedom
Jenny Holzer, Redaction Paintings, 2005-2008
123
Jenny Holzer, Redaction Paintings, 2005-2008
Chapter: Small Right Hand Down - Democracy and Freedom
Annette Kelm, Jeans Buttons, 2023
125
Annette Kelm, Jeans Buttons, 2023
Chapter: Small Right Hand Down - Democracy and Freedom
Mounira Al Solh, Sama'/Ma'as (Ba'ath), 2014
126
Mounira Al Solh, Sama'/Ma'as (Ba'ath), 2014
Chapter: Seelenfenster - Gesture, Movement, Cipher
Charles Hossein Zenderoudi, Chucavira, 1985
127
Charles Hossein Zenderoudi, Chucavira, 1985
Chapter: Seelenfenster - Gesture, Movement, Cipher
Siah Armajani, Panje Tan, 1960
128
Siah Armajani, Panje Tan, 1960
Chapter: Seelenfenster - Gesture, Movement, Cipher
Ahmed Mater, Sajdah Illumination, 2009
130
Ahmed Mater, Sajdah Illumination, 2009
Chapter: Seelenfenster - Gesture, Movement, Cipher
Imi Knoebel, Pencil drawings, untitled, 1972
131
Imi Knoebel, Pencil drawings, untitled, 1972
Chapter: Seelenfenster - Gesture, Movement, Cipher
Yang Jiechang, 100 Layers of Ink, 1992-1994
133
Yang Jiechang, 100 Layers of Ink, 1992-1994
Chapter: Seelenfenster - Gesture, Movement, Cipher
Yūichi Inoue, TORI, 1976
132
Yūichi Inoue, TORI, 1976
Chapter: Seelenfenster - Gesture, Movement, Cipher
Rebecca Horn, Seelenfenster (Painting with Sculpture “Zimbel Zen”), 2012
134
Rebecca Horn, Seelenfenster (Painting with Sculpture “Zimbel Zen”), 2012
Chapter: Seelenfenster - Gesture, Movement, Cipher
Shiryū Morita, KI (JU), 1989
135
Shiryū Morita, KI (JU), 1989
Chapter: Seelenfenster - Gesture, Movement, Cipher