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CONTEXTS

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Ingrid Calame

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Ingrid Calame’s work is at once recognisable as a kindred spirit for me in terms of the similarity inherent in our respective methodologies. Her practice is based around rubbings made on the floor. She then traces on top of these rubbing layers, turning them into abstract drawings and paintings. 

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Her work started with SHPHLOO (1994-1997) a group of enamel paintings and drawings that were based upon marks and stains on the floor of her studio. Reminiscent of Isa Genzken’s Basic research (1989)1, in which the artist created imprints of the floor in her studio, her work was formed as a record of the “events or decisions” around her2. The “micro-histories" of space and time. In this sense I have a strong connection with her work in my hope of revealing the events of making3. I admire her elegant description of finding marks to trace being like ”finding a snowflake - there is an individual formal beauty to them.4” Moreover, the way she is described as someone who is a ”collector of forms” relates to my own practice as well5. Her work is very beautifully summed up by Micheal Newman: 

“Calame’s works have both commemorative and constructive or celebratory dimensions: they contain the memory of what is often low, abject and ignored, while bringing something new into the world in an affirmative way”6.  

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This sentiment, at heart of her practice, is something I wish to both emulate and develop further.

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Foot Notes

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  1. Breitwieser, S., Hoptman, L., Darling, M., Grove, J.D., Lee, L., New, A., Chicago, A. and Museum, D. (n.d.). Isa Genzken : retrospective. (2013) p40

  2. Calame, I., Bradley, F. and Fruitmarket Gallery (2011). Ingrid Calame. Edinburgh: Fruitmarket Gallery ; London. p61

  3. Ibid p92

  4. Ibid p61

  5. Ibid p61

  6. Ibid p93

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Ingrid Calame, Lup Bup Zhir Pow, 61 cm x 61 cm, enamel paint on aluminum, 1994, Kunstmuseum St Gallen, Formal collection Rolf Ricke

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Ingrid Calame, Indianapolis Speedway (2007-14) —  Ingrid Calame: #258 Drawing (Tracings from the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the L.A. River), 91 x 139 x 3 in, 2008, Indianapolis Museum of Art Contemporary art collection

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