29 Nov 2007 - 12 Jan 2008

For her second solo show at Sadie Coles HQ, Paloma Varga Weisz presents a distinctive body of new work comprising a series of her watercolour drawings and a group of mainly wooden sculptures.
Given simple, often one word titles, the drawings portray abstract narrative characters such as Geknickter Mann (broken man), Groβer Hut (big hat), and Midget Pedro. Without contextual surroundings, the figures are concentrated and though the viewer may not be able to place them exactly, they are irrefutably evocative of cultural history, be it mythical, religious or comic.
An integral part of her oeuvre, the new drawings mark a departure for the artist, employing a new cast of characters, much more grounded in the real world rather than fantasy. Humour comes to the fore in pictures such as Raucher (Smoker) and Bettler (Begger). These comedies are counterpoised by other figures that are physically constrained in ways symbolic of psychological angst – there is a hunchback and someone with a harelip, others are burdened with heavy fur mantels, adorned with huge hats or ridiculously exaggerated features.
Themes of bodily containment and deconstruction also run current in the new sculptures. In one piece a bulbous torso hangs from the wall. Covered in copper the piece possesses a mute preciousness. Focus is drawn to the quiet face, solemn with eyes shut and the fact that the figure is limbless is almost hard to see, so great is the presence of its rounded form. In another piece this experience is inverted when the torso is replaced by a wicker basket. Head, hands and feet in carved lime wood are attached to this boxy, lifeless device. Yet there are also moments of silent surprise. In one piece out of a top hat emerges not a white rabbit, but a naked old woman made seamlessly sculpted and treated in the traditional technique of ‘fassen’ (the german word for polychromey). As in the drawings, a range of influences are fused, perhaps most notably in Archface, at once reminiscent of Jugendstil as well as an entrance to a Buddhist temple, a passage. Carved to the point at which it is so smooth and undulating it resembles oozing volcanic lava and then covered in silver, it seems to almost defy the material of which it was made. Meanwhile, a final piece made of plaster, crumbling at the edges, invites a more questioning reading of the other polished surfaces.
Trained as a woodcarver, in her sculptures and drawings, Varga Weisz creates timeless works in which she says she wants it ‘to take on a life of its own and gain its own expression’. Her sculptures and drawings are inextricably intertwined, to the extent that she once described her sculptures as ‘three-dimensional images’. By means of a fusion of influences from Gothic Madonnas to the Teletubbies, Varga Weisz’s works encapsulate simultaneously states of adult knowingness and childhood innocence, personal reference and collective memory. The determination and tenacity with which she works is urgently felt throughout.
Paloma Varga Weisz, born in 1966, was raised in Neustadt an der Weinstrasse, Germany. She lives and works in Düsseldorf. She has had solo exhibitions at the Museum Kurhaus Kleve, 2005 and has been included in numerous group exhibitions including Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin, Kunstverein Düsseldorf, 2005 Venice Biennale, the Berlin Biennial, 2006, as well the permanent collection of K21.
For further information or images please contact Julia Holdway on +44 [0] 20 7434 2227 or
N.B. Opening hours Tuesday – Saturday 11am – 6pm

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21 Oct - 19 Nov 2005

For her first solo exhibition in London, Paloma Varga Weisz presents a chorus of painted wood figures and a large group of works on paper. With their hands gently folded, their bodies truncated to the torso, the carved sculptures assume the role of mute, meditative observers. Carved in traditional lime-wood and painted with layers of softly polished paint, they recall the quiet decoration of choir stalls and pulpits in early churches. There are connections too with mysticism and eastern religions and with the cast of fairytales or the fanciful characters of Alice in Wonderland.

Varga Weisz’s figures also represent a material version of emotional and psychological states. On paper they have a lightness and humour that often give way to a more melancholic feel once carved into wood. On occasion they appear like sweet and confused gargoyles - many have sprouted double heads, multiple sets of eyes and comic expressions: physical manifestations of psychological states of pleasure or anxiety.

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Paloma Varga Weisz Biography

1966 Born Mannheim, Germany
1987-90 Holzbildhauerin, Garmisch – Partenkirchen, Bavaria
1990-98 Staatliche Kunstakademie, Dusseldorf, Germany

Solo Exhibitions
2006 Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin, Ireland
2005 Sadie Coles HQ, London
Chor, Gladstone Gallery, New York
2004 Museum Kurhaus Kleve, Kleve, Germany
2003 Stubai – Frau, Konrad Fischer Galerie, Dusseldorf, Gemany
2002 Big Trip, Konrad Fischer Galerie, Dusseldorf, Germany
Castello di Rivara, Turin, Italy
Kunstraum Galerie der Stadt Schwaz, Tirol, Austria
2001 Bremerhavenstipendium, Kabinett fur aktuelle Kunst, Bremerhaven, Kunstverein Bremerhaven, Germany
2000 Paloma Caberet, Adelin Morlon Art Direction, Dusseldorf, Germany
Demut, Galerie Vera Munro, Hamburg, Germany
1999 Collection Ackermans, Xanten, Germany
1998 Moving Images Without Tears, Galerie Bochynek, Dusseldorf, Germany

Group Exhibitions
2006 Of Mice and Men, 4th Berlin Biennale, KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin (curated by Maurizio Cattelan, Massimiliano Gioni and Ali Subtonik)
2005 The Addiction, Gagosian Gallery, Berlin
Always a Little Further, La 51. Esposizione Internazionale d’Arte della Biennale di Venezia, Venice, Italy
2004 Reflections, Artuatuca Festival, Tongeren, Belgium
Raumfurraum (Spaceforspace), Kunsthalle Dusseldorf, Germany
Triennale der Kleinplastik, Fellbach, Germany
2003 Falling Angels, Greene Naftali Gallery, New York
Poeme-Image, Schloss Wendlinghausen, Dörentrup, Germany
Actionbutton, Ankaufe der Bundesrepublik, Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin
Not Afraid, Rubell Family Collection, Miami (FL)
2002 The Galleries Show, Essor Gallery, Royal Academy, London
2001 Stadtische Gallerie am Bunten Tor, Bremen, Germany
2000 Aroma, Konrad Fischer Galerie, Dusseldorf, Germany
Galerie Andreas Grimm, Palma de Mallorca
1998 Moving Images Without Tears, Galerie Vera Munro, Hamburg, Germany
1996 Zeitgenossische Kunst aus Nordrhein-Westfalen, Kulturhuset, Stockholm