Lena Henke
Lena Henke (born 1982) is a German sculptor, photographer and installation artist.[1][2]
Henke has exhibited at Kunsthalle Zurich,[3] Museum für Gegenwartskunst Siegen,[4] the Bard Hessel Museum of Art,[5] Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt[6] and the 9th Berlin Biennale.[7] Her work is included in the collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art,[1] the ICA Miami[8] and the Sammlung des Bundes, Germany among others.
Life and education[]
Henke studied at the Glasgow School of Art and the Städelschule in Frankfurt/Main where she graduated in 2010 in the class of Michael Krebber. Today she lives in Berlin and New York City and has participated in several international exhibitions.
Work[]
Lena Henke tests the conditions and possibilities of sculpture with technically innovative methods of production. At the same time, she expands the range of meaning of traditional sculpture by incorporating questions of femaleness and the production of power relations in urban space. The possibilities of plastic art and sculpture serve Henke as a basis for understanding the molding (and casting) of bodies as a changeable process of design. Thus, in groups of works like Hooves, Boobs, and Sand Bodies, the process by which the work becomes a work finds representation; motifs of memesis link up with motifs of phantasmagoria; and it becomes apparent that the artist does not take her bearings from ideal conceptions but designs her sculptural figures to match her subjective mental images. In doing so, she not only engages the myth of masculinity; she also works with the strands of historical tradition—the questions of pedestal and space—to interrogate the logic of sculptural representation and representability. She holds the reins with great self-assurance, controlling the representation of women's bodies and the symbolic power of horses and intervening in the mechanisms of urban architecture. It is Henke’s far-reaching reflections on the capacity of the sculptural that enable her, conversely, to grasp urbanity as a historically evolved sculpture, whose social mechanisms of inclusion and exclusion can be altered and redefined by means of targeted interventions. Thus, Henke relocated the entrances to her exhibitions and intervened, with her street signs, in the psychology of existing urban structures. Operating this side of social and architectural power structures, Henke's works open up a highly pleasurable imaginative space in which the sculptural itself expands to encompass feminist and biographical perspectives and thus acquires a new topicality.
Exhibitions (Selection)[]
- 2020 Frieze Sculpture at Rockefeller Center, New York
- 2019 Kunsthalle Bielefeld: L'homme qui marche
- 2019 Museum für Gegenwartskunst Siegen: My fetish Years
- 2019 Lustwarande ’19, Tillburg
- 2018 Whitney Museum, New York: Between the Waters
- 2018 Kunsthalle Zürich: An Idea of Late German Sculpture: To the People of New York, 2018
- 2018 Bard Hessel Museum of Art, New York: In and Out of Place
- 2018 Kunstmuseum Luzern: Ab auf die Insel!
- 2017 Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt: Schrei mich nicht an, Krieger!
- 2016 13th Fellbach Small Sculpture Triennial, Stuttgart: FOOD – Ecologies of the Everyday
- 2016 Real Fine Arts, New York: Heartbreak Highway
- 2016 S.A.L.T.S. Basel: My History of Flow
- 2016 Kunstverein Braunschweig: Available Light
- 2016 Manifesta 11, Zürich: WHAT PEOPLE DO FOR MONEY: SOME JOINT VENTURES
- 2016 9th Berlin Biennale: The Present In Drag
- 2015 New Museum Triennal, New York: Surround Audience
- 2015 Socrates Sculpture Park, New York
- 2014 Kunsthalle Bern: Revelry
- 2014 White Flag Projects, St. Louis: GEBURT UND FAMILIE
- 2014 Skulpturenmuseum Glaskasten Marl: Yes I'm pregnant
- 2013 The Artist's Institute, New York: On Thomas Bayrle
- 2013 Skulpturenpark, Köln
- 2013 MOCA, Miami: Love of Technology
- 2012 Kunstverein Oldenburg: Core, Cut, Care
- 2012 Neuer Aachener Kunstverein: Hang Harder
- 2011 KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin: KW69 #3
- 2010 UCLA, Los Angeles: The 2010 New Wight Biennial
Public Collections (Selection)[]
- Sammlung des Bundes, Bonn, Germany
- Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, US
- CCS Bard Museum, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, US
- Institute of Contemporary Art Miami, Florida, US
- MAMCO - the modern and contemporary Art Museum Geneva, Switzerland
- Sammlung Verbund Vienna, Austria
- Socrates Sculpture Park, Queens, New York, US
- Skulpturen Park Koeln, Germany
- Skulpturenmuseum Glaskasten Marl, Germany
Publications (Monographs)[]
- Lena Henke: My Fetish Years, Spector Books, 2020
- LENA HENKE, VfmK Verlag für moderne Kunst, 2017
- Lena Henke 2010-2015, Verlag Kettler, 2015
- Yes, I’m pregnant!, Kunststiftung NRW, 2014
- FIRST FACES, NAK Neuer Aachener Kunstverein, Mousse Publishing, 2012
Awards[]
- 2019 Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, USA
- 2018 Rubensförderpreis der Stadt Siegen, Germany
- 2015 GWK-Förderpeis Kunst Dortmunder Kunstverein, Germany
External links[]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Lena Henke". whitney.org. Archived from the original on 2019-04-17. Retrieved 2019-04-17.
- ^ Baumgardner, Julie. "Lena Henke: Star Material". W Magazine. Archived from the original on 2019-04-17. Retrieved 2019-04-17.
- ^ "Lena Henke: An Idea of Late German Sculpture; To the People of New York, 2018 - Kunsthalle Zürich". kunsthallezurich.ch. Archived from the original on 2019-04-17. Retrieved 2019-04-17.
- ^ "Lena Henke - Ausstellungen - Museum für Gegenwartskunst Siegen". www.mgksiegen.de (in German). Retrieved 2021-04-12.
- ^ "In and Out of Place". CCS Bard. Retrieved 2021-04-12.
- ^ "LENA HENKE". SCHIRN KUNSTHALLE FRANKFURT. 2017-04-28. Retrieved 2021-04-12.
- ^ "Berlin Biennale | M/L Artspace" (in German). Retrieved 2021-04-12.
- ^ "Where the Streets have two Names | Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami". icamiami.org. Retrieved 2021-04-12.
- 1982 births
- Living people
- Women installation artists
- German installation artists
- 21st-century German artists
- 21st-century German women artists