Untitled
Ernst Caramelle
gesso and gouache on wood
61 × 91.5 × 1.5 cm
1998
Acquisition 2007
Inv. No. 0161
With Giotto, painting turned from the portrayal of two-dimensional figures positioned against a flat background to three-dimensional representations in the early fourteenth century. Ernst Caramelle, born in Hall,
This quality is mainly achieved thanks to the chosen technique: gesso is a colorfast priming coat made from rabbit-skin glue and whiting, which results in a fresco-like appearance in combination with the gouache applied in glazes or opaque layers. Contrasting with the color areas’ cloudy character, their hard edges and right angles contribute to this impression. This unfolds a dialectics between the picture’s abstract quality and the two-dimensional effect of the pictorial elements, which is also strongly determined by the coloring. The frame, door and meander motifs provide an additional level of dynamic, shifting meanings which, against the background of the viewer’s perceptual experiences, trigger manifold chains of associations. Resting in itself at first sight, the picture acquires a long-lasting shimmering presence because of these complex qualities.
Paul Katzberger, 2011 (translation: Wolfgang Astelbauer)
Continue readingExhibitions
Ernst Caramelle. A Résumé, MUMOK, Vienna, 2018
Publications
Ernst Caramelle. Ein Resümee, Cologne 2018, p. s. p.
evn collection. 2006–2011, Cologne 2011, p. 86 f