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Wolfe von Lenkiewicz

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Wolfe von Lenkiewicz
Lenkiewicz in his Melton Street studio
Born
Dartmoor, England
NationalityBritish
Notable workLondon, United Kingdom

Wolfe von Lenkiewicz is a British artist known for his artistic reconfigurations of well-known imageries from art history and visual culture to create ambiguous compositions that question art historical discourses.[1] He lives and works in London.[2]

Early life and education

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Wolfe von Lenkiewicz was born in Dartmoor, England, in October 1966 to Celia Norman and the British painter Robert Lenkiewicz.[3] He is of German-Polish-Jewish descent, with his great-grandfather being Baron von Schlossberg, court painter to King Ludwig II of Bavaria.[4] Lenkiewicz was educated at University of York, graduating in 1989 with a degree in Philosophy.[2] Lenkiewicz studied contemporary epistemology under Marie McGinn, who is now the emeritus professor of philosophy York university. He was also tutored by Roger Woolhouse on John Locke.

Artistic career

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In the East End of London in 2002, Lenkiewicz founded T1+2 Art Space which he directed and curated as an independent artist run project for six years. The inaugural show being in Wheeler Street with Gustav Metzger titled, "100,000 Newspapers", a public active installation. Lenkiewicz also collaborated with Metzger on a conference titled, "World's First Congress of Fork Lift Trucks" at the Truman brewery. Invited were speakers Norman Rosenthal, directors of the Serpentine Gallery and curators including Hans Ulrich Obrist. Other notable shows included the Viennese Actionist Otto Muehl who were invited to exhibit paintings and films as well as contributing to talks. Artists shown at T1+2 read as a list of names from most of the generation that followed the YBAs in the East End.

Lenkiewicz exhibited 33 drawings including 3 large-scale works at his first major exhibition, Nu-Trinity, at Dickinson in 2007.[3][5] Richard Dyer described the exhibition as 'an iconographic investigation into the power inherent in certain images and events, and the mythos associated with them'.[5] Lenkiewicz’s works have since then been exhibited internationally, including Tate Britain and All Visual Arts in London, Palais des Beaux-Arts in Lille, as well as in Dublin, Hamburg, Berlin and Venice.[2]

Wolfe von Lenkiewicz working on the Raft

Lenkiewicz was represented by All Visual Arts Gallery directed by Joe la Placa. He painted in a 19th century Roman studio for several months and completed a life size reinterpretation of Théodore Géricault's Raft of the Medusa. After having left Italy, the monumental painting was exhibited at the London gallery AVA with the support of Michael Platt of BlueCrest Capital Management. In 2009, Lenkiewicz's solo exhibition titled The Descent of Man exhibited over 80 works in a former landmark bank building built originally by Arthur Beresford Pite in London. The space was sponsored by IVG Immobilien property group in order to enable the artist to work on a large scale with the relevant real estate and wall space for three years. Lenkiewicz then moved to a large studio in Grosvenor Place, Belgravia from 2016 until 2019, which was sponsored by Hammer Holdings where Lenkiewicz’s The School of Night was painted.

Lenkiewicz's works primarily deal with the appropriation of language and mythology[6] by juxtaposing elements such as religious figures, pop culture icons, literary characters and motifs.[7] Lenkiewicz's drawings and paintings often reference iconic imageries, including those by Albrecht Dürer, Pablo Picasso, Andy Warhol, and Hieronymus Bosch. Lenkiewicz transforms Dürer's Self-Portrait (1500) in his Werewolf (2011), referencing Jacques Derrida's The Beast and the Sovereign.

His most recent solo exhibition, The School of Night, was held at the Saatchi Gallery in 2018, featuring several paintings and drawings, with the highlight being a vast 9 x 4 metre canvas. https://www.saatchigallery.com/exhibition/wolfe_von_lenkiewicz__the_school_of_night

Exhibitions

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Upcoming exhibitions include Cranach: Artist and Innovator, a group exhibition to be shown at Compton Verney, March 2020. Lenkiewicz will also show at the Nationalmuseum, Stockholm in February 2020 and the renowned Ateneum Museum, Finland in June 2020.

Solo exhibitions

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Year Exhibition
2018 The School of Night, Saatchi Gallery, London
2018 Processions of Orpheus, Jewish Museum and Tolerance Centre, Moscow
2016 L'Oeuvre, House of the Nobleman, London
2016 Meta-History, Riflemaker Gallery, London
2015 Wolfe von Lenkiewicz: A Retrospective, Galerie Michael Haas/Mark Sanders Art Consultancy, Berlin
2015 Delirious Picasso, House of the Nobleman/Mark Sanders Art Consultancy, Academy Mansion, New York
2014 Algebra: The Reunion of Broken Parts, House of the Nobleman/Mark Sanders Art Consultancy, London
2014 Wolfe von Lenkiewicz: Paintings and Drawings, Galerie MIRO, Prague
2014 Snow White and the Knights of Schwangau, Riflemaker Gallery, London
2013 The Raft of the Medusa, All Visual Arts, London
2012 Hieronymus Bosch, All Visual Arts, London
2011 The Beast and the Sovereign, Galerie Michael Haas, Berlin
2011 Liberation: Their Story Begins, Sebastian Guinness Gallery, Ireland
2011 I Have an Excellent Idea...Let's Change the Subject, All Visual Arts, London
2010 Victory Over the Sum, Triumph Gallery, Moscow
2009 The Descent of Man, All Visual Arts, London
2008 Nu-Trinity, Simon Dickinson, London
2007 Mutagenesis, Mimmo Scognamiglio Contemporary Art, Naples
2007 Mutagenesis, Paradise Row, London
2007 Emblematic Psychosis, Ingalls & Associates, Miami
2001 The Park, T1+2 Artspace, London
2000 Hangman, T1+2 Artspace, London

Selected group exhibitions

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Year Exhibition
2019 Hommage a Leonard et a la Renaissance, Chateau du Rivau, France
2018 TEFAF Maastricht, Beck and Eggeling, Maastricht
2018 Strange Beauty, Beck and Eggeling, Dusseldorf
2018 Painting Still Alive, Galerie Michael Haas/Center for Contemporary Art, Turin
2017 Doing Identity: The Reydan Weiss Collection, Kunstmuseum Bochum, Bochum
2017 Munich Highlights, Beck and Eggeling, Munich
2017 I Lost My Heart to a Starship Trooper, Griffin Gallery, London
2016 Forever, Bubox, Kortrijk, Belgium
2016 Persona, Musee Quai Branly, Paris
2015 Picasso in Contemporary Art, Wexner Centre for the Arts, Columbus, Ohio
2015 Picasso in Contemporary Art, Deichtorhallen, Hamburg
2015 The Remarkable Lightness of Being, Aeroplastics Contemporary, Brussels
2014 Art Basel, Galerie Michael Haas, Basel
2013 Wonderful: Humboldt, Krokodil & Polke, Me Collectors Room, Berlin
2013 Viewing Room, All Visual Arts, London
2013 Between the Lines: A Group Drawing Show, All Visual Arts, London
2012 Memories of the Future, La Maison Rouge, Paris
2012 Metamorphosis, All Visual Arts, London
2012 Babel, Beaux Arts de Lille, Lille
2012 Everywhere and Nowhere, Villa Jauss, Obersdorf
2011 The House of the Nobleman, London
2011 Zwei Sammler, Deichtorhallen, Hamburg
2010 Vanitas: The Transience of Earthly Pleasures, All Visual Arts, London
2010 The House of the Nobleman, London
2009 The Age of the Marvellous, All Visual Arts, London
2009 The Embassy, 20 Hoxton Square Projects, London
2007 Avatar of Sacred Discontent, T1+2 Gallery, London
2007 Avatar of Sacred Discontent, Port Eliot LitFest, St Germans
2006 New Gothic, Tate Britain, London
2006 End of Civilisation, Port Eliot Castle, St Germans
2006 Great Eastern Hotel, Kristy Stubbs Gallery, London
2005 Go Between, Magazine 4, Kunstverein, Bregenz
2003 World's First Congress of Fork Lift Trucks, Atlantis Gallery, London
2002 100,000 Newspapers: Gustav Metzger, Stewart Home, Wolfe von Lenkiewicz, T1+2 Artspace, London
1999 The Constant of Variation, T1+2 Artspace, London

Upcoming exhibitions

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Year Exhibition
2021 Wolfe von Lenkiewicz: Solo Exhibition, The Box Museum, Plymouth
2020 Iconic Works, Nationalmuseum, Stockholm
2020 Iconic Works, Ateneum Museum, Finland
2020 Cranach: Artist and Innovator, Compton Verney Art Gallery, Warwickshire
2019 Hortus, Colnaghi Gallery, London

References

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  1. ^ 'Wolfe von Lenkiewicz', AnOther Magazine, 26 April 2011
  2. ^ a b c 'Wolfe von Lenkiewicz', Other Criteria
  3. ^ a b 'Market news: Warhol's Conrad Black legacy', Colin Gleadell, The Telegraph, 23 October 2007
  4. ^ Art Review blog, 17 February 2010
  5. ^ a b "Wolfe Lenkiewicz: Nu-Trinity", Richard Dyer, Art Review, January 2008
  6. ^ 'Wolfe von Lenkiewicz', James Read, Don't Panic Online, 18 May 2011
  7. ^ 'Wolfe von Lenkiewicz / Age of the Marvellous', Dazed Digital, September 2010
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