
Albert Oehlen. Untitled (Baum 44), 2015 © Gary Tatintsian Gallery and the artist

Albert Oehlen. Untitled (Baum 44), 2015 (detail) © Gary Tatintsian Gallery and the artist

Albert Oehlen. Untitled (Baum 44), 2015 (Installation shot) © Gary Tatintsian Gallery and the artist
Albert Oehlen Krefeld, Germany, b. 1954
Further images
"What reasons can you have to move left, right, straight, or in circles? There are many answers to that. And then i saw the trees doing that in a way, the winter tree that I choose. They have the freedom to make any move. And so they are a kind of model of abstraction." — Albert Oehlen
Albert Oehlen’s Baumbilder (Tree Paintings) series is a continuation of the artist’s exploration into abstract visual language. The tree motif first emerged in Oehlen’s work in the 1980s and has since become a recurring subject. Through the redefinition of this motif, Oehlen engages in a constant re-examination of the foundations of painting, expanding and bending its boundaries.
In his study of abstraction, Oehlen has not entirely abandoned elements of figuration. The result is a sophisticated fusion of two opposing pictorial practices that, when combined, do not conflict but rather complement each other, creating a harmonious visual composition. The Tree Paintings blend the figural and the abstract, bridging the gap between representation and pure abstraction.
Within the picture plane, a bare and leafless tree trunk, with tangled branches, floats against a white ground, next to blocks of magenta color gradations. The interplay of painted, spray-painted, and screen-printed lines creates a dynamic collision between mechanical and hand-made gestures. Rather than using a traditional canvas as his foundation, Oehlen chose aluminum-coated Dibond panels, adding a layer of depth and texture to his work. The geometric tree lines, initially appearing to be digitally produced, reveal themselves to be the product of careful hand-rendering upon closer inspection, demonstrating Oehlen’s ability to blend modern techniques with traditional painting methods.
Exhibitions
Albert Oehlen. Gagosian Gallery, London, UK. 5 February24–March 2016