Duo Show

Confab Window

Confab Window

Duo Show

Confab Window

Participating Artist

Olivia Bax & Veronika Hilger

Informations

Oct 13 → Nov 13, 2023

2 rue de Beaubourg

Paris, France

Confab Window

Interior ou interiority ? 

From October 14 to November 4, 2023, Hatch Gallery brings together artists Olivia Bax (born in 1988, lives and works in London) and Veronika Hilger (born in 1981, lives and works in Munich) for a duo show curated by Thomas Conchou. Initiated by Margot de Rochebouët and Giovanna Traversa, the two artists engaged in a sustained dialogue throughout 2023 around their artistic practices. A sculptor and a painter, they discovered numerous shared interests, including a determined and vigorous use of color. Olivia Bax's Boo-Boo (2021) and Veronika Hilger's Untitled 8 (2023), placed in conversation at the entrance of the gallery space, testify to their commitment to a powerful chromatic palette. Along with 6 untitled (2023), they introduce the exhibition as a dynamic conversation between the artists and their mediums. These works alone embody the intentions of 'Confab Window': to create an evocative and inhabited landscape that invites the viewer to wander and introspect. 

Within the context of this collaboration, the concepts of threshold, boundary, and passage (of place, state, or emotion) have particularly captivated the artists. The exhibition explores several questions raised in the book 'Interiors and Interiority', edited by Ewa Lajer-Burcharth and Beate Söntgen and published in 2015. The two authors, also engaged in a conversation between Germanophone and Anglophone spaces, wonder how we began to conceive subjectivity as an internal element within the body and psyche? From literature as an autobiographical form to the pictorial tradition of Flemish painting, from the study of bourgeois domestic interiors of the 18th century to the psychoanalytic model, they trace genealogies in Western thought to understand how the idea of 'interior' became attached to the perception of self. 

In the works of Bax and Hilger, there is a shared desire to explore liminal spaces that open pathways between interior and exterior, objectivity and subjectivity. Bax's sculptural environments oscillate between systems and characters, serving as both containers and figures imbued with personality. This is exemplified in Oriel (2023), a new production that emphasizes the deployment of a hollow space within the artist's sculptures. Her fascination with architectural sedimentation and borrowings from functional objects is also expressed through the emergence of windows. Once equipped with pockets or nests, her sculptures have now become architecture, allowing the viewer's gaze to pass through. The internal space is as significant as the protruding elements of the framework or texture, revealing a second sculptural level that is not immediately apprehensible to the eye. 

For Hilger, the painting is primarily the space of a landscape that intertwines natural and artificial reliefs. Abstraction and figuration are suspended in ambiguous landscapes where signs appear like protagonists: so-called "associative" forms, sometimes biomorphic and sometimes symbolic, circulate between different pictorial planes. At their junction, portals often appear, emphasizing the passage between worlds or subjective states. Particularly noteworthy are Untitled 2, evoking Plato's cave or Marie-Antoinette's grotto at the Petit Trianon, where form and the idea of form seem to overlap in play of shadows and repetition. 

In the works of both artists, the interest in sometimes highly intense chromatic impact, the fondness for the familiar and intriguing, as well as the junction between body, landscape, and structures, engage in a dialogue with the legacies of surrealism. ‘Confab Window’ translates their shared attention to the effects of thresholds, in-betweens, and the processes of instability that these circulations generate in their practices. The title of the exhibition also refers to the shared period of time between them and the continuation of this conversation among the works in the exhibition. New productions are presented alongside existing works in the gallery's alcoves, which are conducive to thoughtful contemplation. Here, one discovers works stemming from peripheral practices of the artists: a series of drawings for Olivia Bax and a ceramic piece for Veronika Hilger.

Courtesy Thomas Conchou

Read more

The work of Olivia Bax is often characterised by familiar elements such as a hook, handle or vessel presented in unconventional, coloured forms. However, it is the texture of the surface which offers the viewer the most immediate insight. Bax generates her own paper pulp to cover and form a mantle over linear armatures.  Moulding each sculpture in this way creates the distinctive texture of the work. Rooted in drawing, the work carries instinctive gestures from start to finish to suggest an action or feeling. 

Olivia Bax (b. 1988, Singapore) lives and works in London. She studied BA Fine Art at Byam Shaw School of Art, London (2007-2010) and MFA Sculpture at Slade School of Fine Art, London  (2014-2016). Recent solo exhibitions include: Home Range, Holtermann, London (2022); Spill, L21, Mallorca (2022); Off Grid, Mark Tanner Sculpture Award Exhibition, Standpoint Gallery London (2020) toured to Cross Lane Projects, Kendal (2020/21) and Tremenheere Sculpture Gardens (2021); pah-d'bah, HS Projects, London (2021) and Chute, Ribot Gallery, Milan (2019/20). Prizes include: The Mark Tanner Sculpture Award (2019/20); Kenneth Armitage Young Sculptor Prize (2016), Additional Award, Exeter Contemporary Open, Exeter Phoenix (2017) and Public Choice Winner, UK/Raine, Saatchi Gallery, London (2015). Bax’s work was acquired by the 2020-21 UK Arts Council Collection.

Veronika Hilger’s (*1981) paintings are located in an intermediate realm: between genres, classifications, and abstraction. They address classical subjects such as interiors, landscapes, still life and portraits. She does not separate these genres clearly from each other but rather fuses them into independent pictorial worlds of biomorphic forms that can be read as parables about the human relationship to nature and about the relationship of humans to each other. Ultimately, the oscillation, the as-well-as, and the in-between are what’s interesting to the artist. She explores fundamental questions about the nature and meaning of painting in its formal, technical and conceptual realization by arranging, shifting, layering and changing the pictorial elements in a spontaneous yet careful painting process.

For some time, the artist has also been concerned with ideas of form, materiality, perspective, color, structure and coating in a sculptural way. Some of her ceramic objects are closely linked to her painting and take up many of its working approaches. The sensibility and care in the handling of color, brush stroke and surface are transferred into a three-dimensional space. Other sculptures, which are more representational, focus more on form than color and have a strong symbolic charge.

Installation view, Confab Window, Hatch Gallery, Paris, 2023. © Aurélien Mole. Courtesy of the Artists and Hatch Gallery.

Installation view, Confab Window, Hatch Gallery, Paris, 2023. © Aurélien Mole. Courtesy of the Artists and Hatch Gallery.

Olivia Bax
Boo-Boo

2021
Steel, chicken wire, paper, household paint, plaster, UV resistant glue, epoxy clay, UV, varnish
157 x 130 x 114 cm

Veronika Hilger
Untitled 5
2023
Oil on canvas
150 x 260 cm
Dyptich

Installation view, Confab Window, Hatch Gallery, Paris, 2023. © Aurélien Mole. Courtesy of the Artists and Hatch Gallery.

Olivia Bax
Oriel

2023
Steel, chicken wire, paper, UV resistant glue, household paint, plaster, aluminium wire, funnel,varnish, wheel , epoxy clay, UV
195 x 140 x 92 cm

Installation view, Confab Window, Hatch Gallery, Paris, 2023. © Aurélien Mole. Courtesy of the Artists and Hatch Gallery.

Installation view, Confab Window, Hatch Gallery, Paris, 2023. © Aurélien Mole. Courtesy of the Artists and Hatch Gallery.

Veronika Hilger
Untitled 9

2023
Oil on canvas
45 x 45 cm

Installation view, Confab Window, Hatch Gallery, Paris, 2023. © Aurélien Mole. Courtesy of the Artists and Hatch Gallery.

Installation view, Confab Window, Hatch Gallery, Paris, 2023. © Aurélien Mole. Courtesy of the Artists and Hatch Gallery.

Installation view, Confab Window, Hatch Gallery, Paris, 2023. © Aurélien Mole. Courtesy of the Artists and Hatch Gallery.

Véronika Hilger
Untitled 2

2023
Oil and acrylic on canvas
190 x 130 cm

Found your masterpiece?

Found your masterpiece?

Found your masterpiece?