TOEN WE VERGATEN WAAR WE VANDAAN KWAMEN

25 February – 17 April 2021
Femmy Otten invites Gijs Frieling

femmy otten, gijs frieling, dmw gallery, one tear at a time, sculpture

TOEN WE VERGATEN WAAR WE VANDAAN KWAMEN

Preview 24 February by appointment from 4-8 PM 
Vernissage 25 February from 6-9 PM

Borger 26 March from 6-10 PM
Finissage 3 April from 2-6 PM


Femmy Otten invites Gijs Frieling to create a duo exhibition as a living organism, combining sweeping in situ murals with drawings, paintings and sculptures embedded in the space in which they are presented.

In the exhibition, Femmy Otten (b. 1981, Amsterdam) presents new paintings and sculptures, as well as selected pieces from her recent solo exhibition ‘One Tear at A Time’ at Fons Welters. Carefully crafted in wood, the artist’s ‘contemporary fertility sculptures’ evoke themes of motherhood and womanhood. The plasticity of wood as a living material embodying time itself is reinforced by placing the sculptures in the walls of the artspace, emphasising the negative or residual space that arises around it. Otten’s paintings aim to convey a similar sense of physical connectivity between the works and the viewer through a self-proclaimed style of ‘studied nonchalance’, based on the practices developed by the Flemish Primitives. Oil paint is applied in transparent layers on a white painted background, reflecting the light in a way that creates an enormous depth. As such, her paintings make it seem as if the light shines from within, contributing to an intuitive, phenomenological viewing experience.

Gijs Frieling (b. 1966, Amsterdam) makes large-scale temporary murals and paintings. The work of Frieling can be seen as an attempt to present the development of painting as an entity in which the differences between fine art, folk art, religious painting, ‘high art’ and the avant garde are merely contextual. His wall-paintings, in particular, originated as a way for the artist to make sweeping works on controversial, often religious, subjects, albeit on an impermanent basis. In recent years, the murals have evolved into statements about the direct relationship between the artist’s works and the space in which they are presented. They are ornamental paintings of plants, animals, columns and bows, which on the one hand confirm the existing architecture, while at the same time changing the entire atmosphere of the artspace.

Femmy Otten
One Tear at a Time, 2020
Limewood, electric motor, birch plywood pedestal
147 x 91 x 80 cm

Femmy Otten
Untitled, 2018
Platan wood
35 x 45 x 15 cm

Femmy Otten
Untitled, 2014
Oil on canvas, framed
95 x 87 cm

Femmy Otten
Untitled, 2020
Acrylic on plaster
34 x 37 x 4 cm

Femmy Otten
Untitled, 2019
Oil on canvas
51 x 36 cm

Femmy Otten
Untitled, 2020
Epoxy, acrylic on plaster, statuary marble
12 x 10 x 2 cm

Femmy Otten
Untitled, 2017
Epoxy, acrylic on burlwood
18 x 26 x 3.5 cm

Femmy Otten
One Year in Ten #1, 2017
Pencil, oil, watercolour on paper
42 x 58 cm

Femmy Otten
Untitled, 2018-2020
Limewood, hair
97 x 24 x 24 cm

Femmy Otten
Untitled, 2017
Watercolour, paper, pencil on paper
42 x 58 cm

Gijs Frieling
Blauwe klaprozen, 2019
Pigments and casein on canvas
60 x 95 cm

Gijs Frieling
Twee lelies met hyacinten, 2018
Pigments and casein on canvas
80 x 130 cm

Gijs Frieling
Annunciatie, 2003
Pigments and casein on canvas
35 x 40 cm

Gijs Frieling
Twee klaprozen, 2018
Pigments and casein on canvas
95 x 80 cm

Gijs Frieling
Witte lelie, 2019
Pigments and casein on canvas
40 x 65 cm