Nicole Eisenman, born 1965 in France, lives in New York, and her work is
captivating because of its fascination with the human condition,
questions about interpersonal interaction, and the precise observation
of processes of alienation in civilisation. In her drawings, paintings,
and sculptures, the artist combines elements from pop cultural contexts
(political satire, comics) with traditional art historical references to
form a new unity. Köpfe, Küsse, Kämpfe (Heads, Kisses, Struggles)
brings together works from all of Eisenman's creative periods. Against
the backdrop of her artistic practice, in which various stylistic and
compositional elements of historical painting become visible alongside
pop-cultural influences, the show and the book are combined with works
of classical modernism from the collections of the cooperating museums.
Through these selectively introduced historical works, the exhibition
and the book, together with Eisenman's oeuvre, open up a resonance space
spanning a century in which social upheavals are presented in their
urgency, but also with hope and confidence.