Political painting in the post-factual ageWhile postmodern painting has always been accommpanied by the discussion about its end, it has at all times pointed to its most important characteristic: due to its discursive character, it is able to weave a never-ending network of representations. The same applies to the works by Katrin Plavcak (born 1970 in Gütersloh, & grew up in Austria). Her non-impasto oil and acrylic paintings draw figurative references to Dix and Grosz, Magritte and Picasso, Höch and Lassnig, as well as the practice of naive painting, where perspective and spatial conditions are suspended while several narrative strands coexist. Katrin Plavcak purposefully examines the history of images originating from comics, cartoons, illustration and, quite broadly, from technical visual media. Clichés, distortions, trivializations, and spectacles, as produced by the media industry and whose logic is also quite seductive to art and its institutions, form an aesthetic fundus from which, in her own painterly language and in a highly qualified transformation process, she formulates her artistic point of view. Katrin Plavcak neither resorts to pathos nor any ideologically »correct« position, but rather directly pursues her interest in Dada or Surrealism, art movements where the achievements of photography, film and advertising, and, last but not least, popular magazine culture in methodical combination with montage and collage, have influenced the avant-garde concept. In addition, Katrin Plavcak is a great portraitist who knows how to psychologically pinpoint the characteristics of her found or invented figures with great painterly skill. Thus, if these days the post-factual age is heralded because we are inundated with information, to the point where it becomes meaningless to us, the opposite pole could be that kind of art.
About the Author: Katrin Plavcak, born 1970, is an Austrian painter and musician. She lived in Beriin, and moved back to Vienna in 2018. Her list of exhibitions is exuberant, with participations at group shows which determined the climate of gentrification in the metropolises in the 2010s: The Ashtray Show in London 2018, Avant Hard/Avant Fart in Vienna 2017, We are Watching You in London 2015, Vienna Temporary Autonomous Zone in Warsaw 2014, The Legend of the Shelves in Berlin 2013, Let the Rythm Hit Em in Berlin 2011, Captain Paphile at Falckenberg Collection Hamburg 2010. Since 2000 Katrin Plavcak exhibited numerous times at galleries in Vienna and Berlin, 2002 at the Neue Galerie am Landesmuseum Joanneum Graz, 2006 Stadtgalerie Schwaz, 2009 Secession Vienna, 2012 Austrian Cultural Forum Prague, 2014 The Cock Tavern London, 2018 Galerie Schwartzsche Villa Berlin.