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Exhibitions

Millie Jordan Holmer - Dead Letters


13 March–24 April 2010
Galerie Michael Janssen Berlin

ExhibitionsWorks CV

Emil Holmer, Dead Letters, Installation view, 2010, Galerie Michael Janssen Berlin

Millie Jordan Holmer - Dead Letters
13 March–24 April 2010
Galerie Michael Janssen, Berlin

From March 13 to April 24, 2010, Galerie Michael Janssen is presenting a selection of Millie Jordan Holmer’s recent paintings. Dead Letters is the first solo exhibition of the Swedish artist at the gallery. Born in Karlstad, Sweden in 1975, Holmer studied at the Academy of Arts in Umeå and at the UdK in Berlin, where he was a guest student in the class of Tony Cragg. In recent years, Holmer had several solo and group exhibitions in Europe, Australia and South Africa.

Millie Jordan Holmer’s paintings are cathartic explosions: axes, spears, wood constructions, body parts as well as abstract geometric forms and amorphous shapes seem to be exploding like reworks on the canvas or are just heaped up like debris after an apocalyptic video game war. Holmer’s works are reminiscent of Graffiti and the avant-garde movement COBRA, whose primary focus consisted of semi-abstract paintings with brilliant color, violent brushwork and distorted human gestures.

The large format paintings are violent image symphonies, in which the density inherent in every depicted scene creates a blur, straining the viewer’s eyes. Drawing on such areas as psychopathology, fear, power, sexuality and the body, Emil Holmer is strongly influenced by pop culture, midway between the horror film and the comic strip.

Since the Chaos and Fractal Theory, „chaos” doesn’t simply mean „anarchy“ but „a higher order“: out of confusion and complexity life emerges as a functioning organism. Chaos displays an innate tendency to form into patterns and structures and it fosters and commands order despite of all forces that act against it. Self-organization is the result of re-invention and creative adaptation due to the introduction of perturbed equilibrium. Holmer’s paintings are one example of an organization, which exists in a constant state of perturbation, with irregularities, even randomness in the dynamics of systems.

 Emil Holmer, Dead Letters, Installation view, 2010, Galerie Michael Janssen BerlinEmil Holmer, Dead Letters, Installation view, 2010, Galerie Michael Janssen BerlinEmil Holmer, Dead Letters, Installation view, 2010, Galerie Michael Janssen BerlinEmil Holmer, Dead Letters, Installation view, 2010, Galerie Michael Janssen Berlin

Millie Jordan Holmer, Dead Letters, Installation view, 2010, Galerie Michael Janssen Berlin