| Lavish bouquets of flowers, bloody roasts of venison,
pewter goblets and skulls – for centuries, still lifes have
fascinated artists and viewers alike, and their popularity continues
to this day. From 6 June to 5 October 2008, the Hamburger Kunsthalle
is presenting its major summer exhibition The Mirror of Secret
Desires, which includes more than 150 works from five centuries.
The core of the exhibition is formed by over fifty sensuous and opulent
still-life paintings from the Baroque period. Together with still
lifes by master painters such as Auguste Renoir, Claude Monet, Max
Beckmann and Georges Braque, they enter into a dialogue with contemporary
sculptures and installations by the likes of Mona Hatoum, Thomas
Schütte, Jeff Wall, Jörg Sasse, Thomas Demand or James
Hopkins, who follow in the great tradition of the still life.
The depiction of carefully arranged inanimate objects – from
luxury goods up to dead animals such as game or fowl, fruits, flowers,
treasures and curiosities – was a preoccupation of artists
even in ancient times. The particular charm of this form of painting
lies in the perfect illusion, the creation of remarkably lifelike
images with paint, brushwork, composition and skilful lighting. There
is a mysteriousness and peculiar sensuality about all still lifes
that the exhibition sets out to explore.
Still lifes capture the gaze and stimulate the senses, but they
also have an enigmatic quality. The objects often appear so lifelike
that the viewer is almost tempted to pick them up. The exhibition
aims to determine exactly how these images work – what lies
behind this game of deception, illusion and perception and what significance
do these artful arrangements of objects have for the viewer? Yet
even knowing what the objects signify does not lessen the viewer’s
pleasure in contemplating still-life images. It may be the sheer
visual delight offered by optical illusions, deception and simulation
that transports the viewer time and time again, or perhaps the pleasure
of having one’s own secret desires mirrored. The exhibition
in Hamburg places particular emphasis on the sensual and phenomenological
aspects of the still life: the illusory effects, the play of mirrors,
reflective glasses and fabrics, and the various strategies employed
by the artist to manipulate the viewer’s perception.
Contemporary artists are by no means reluctant to address the time-honoured
theme of overflowing shelves, dead animals and laid tables. On the
contrary – ‘styled’ interiors displaying meaningful
and symbolic objects continue to be a subject of great interest.
Contemporary still lifes refer to changed modes of aesthetic perception
and reception since modernism, and are increasingly used to explore
new styles, materials and media.
In surprising juxtapositions, the contemporary sculptures and installations
engage in a visual dialogue with the older paintings. Classical motifs
such as richly laid tables, dead game animals or traditional vanitas
symbols also appear in modern-day object worlds situated between
everyday life and spirituality. James Hopkins’ installation Decadence
and Demise – shelves filled with objects which would typically
be found in a young person’s room and which – when seen
from a distance – reveal the contours of a human skull – is
a direct reminder of the transience of life and recalls the morbid
charm of previous generations of still lifes.
Curators of the exhibition: PD Dr. Martina Sitt, Dr. des. Dorothee
Gerkens (assistant).
With kind support of the exhibition by 
and the exhibition catalogue by 
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Willem Claesz Heda (1594 - 1680/82), Prunkstillleben,
1638

Leidener Meister, Vanitas-Stillleben mit zwei
Violinen, Spiegel und Totenkopf, um 1635

Isaak Soreau (1604 - nach 1654), Stillleben
mit Früchten, um 1640

Gustave Courbet (1819 -1877), Blütenzweige
und Blumen, 1855

James Hopkins (*1976), Decadence and Demise,
2006
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