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Max Ernst, Baseball bats - and what’s next. Now also as audio.


This is the content from my latest newsletter. That you can now also listen to. So. First here are two links with the audio files (in english and german). There are some pictures below, illustrating my words. And then the text for those who like to read! (reading time approx. 6-7 min.)

Update 10.10.2025: I added a video from the “making of: Les Arbres de Max” (below).

Enjoy!

PS: To subscribe to my newsletter, click here!

Les Arbres de Max, 2025
Wood, Acrylic paint, 50 x 70 x 3 cm


Maybe some of you have noticed this before: throughout my entire body of work over the past decades, I’ve always been experimenting with new techniques, storytelling, and different forms of expression. This is a very important part of my artistic practice – probably because I’ve always been quite restless… and it somehow gets, hmm… more dynamic the older I get.

Maybe because time feels shorter now, and there’s still so much left to do.

As an artist, you eventually have to confront your own mortality. Which is totally fine, really – but no one wants to leave this world with an unfinished sentence on their lips.

(Note: I am not sick nor dying. Just contemplating.)

Of course, this constant experimentation can seem erratic. Even confusing.

But that’s not the point – at its core, it’s really just my deep restlessness, a never-ending curiosity, the feeling that there’s always more out there.

And so, through trying, failing, destroying, restarting, doubting – eventually, somehow, I get to a form of success. Whatever that might look like.

And yes, there’s also this huge urge to communicate. The narcissistic side of my artistic soul. You need that, too, in order to create uncompromising work – work with a point of view that doesn’t have to please everyone, just like a finished painting can’t and shouldn’t aim to please everyone.

And I don’t just mean aesthetically.

Just to be clear: I’m only talking about myself here. Every artist should absolutely decide for themselves how they want to work and position themselves. There are definitely easier paths than mine, but probably also far more complicated ones.

More than 15 years ago, I gave up the practice of „pure“ painting to focus on an unusual wood-based technique – for me, that was the beginning of a great sense of freedom. I felt like I was discovering something entirely new for myself, and myself alone. Since then, I’ve developed my very own techniques, experimenting with all kinds of formats: flat works, wall sculptures, standard sculptures, dioramas, prints, complex wooden constructions, hybrids of painting and woodcut. And even today, I can’t claim that I’m anywhere near a finish line. Which is a really good thing.

Three years ago, I added classic painting back into my “portfolio.” They are a bit lesser well received and appreciated than my woodworks, which are a totally different beast of course.

Wich is totally ok - I don’t really care about that, that is out of my responsibility and not my concern at all.

So just last week I was in my Hamburg studio, painting again, this time over old canvases – because the stories they tell no longer fit, or because they asked to be continued. I have absolutely no idea where this is going – which makes it especially important for me to just keep on with it. Maybe add even more “layers” on top. And then remove them again. And maybe out them away again for some time. And then continue. Or restart.

There’s no goal, no exhibition, no gallery, no collectors for whom these works are being created.

It’s all just a passionately necessary process, but none of it needs to be visible in the end.

For Whom The Bell Tolls

The same can’t be said for my series of baseball bats – those do want to be loud and attention-grabbing.

They’re “opinion amplifiers,” as someone commented on my Instagram account.

The urge to carve the sentence “I am all out of Love Songs” – taken from one of my ink drawings (oh yeah, those still exist too) – into a baseball bat came to me one day quite suddenly. I felt like I needed to turn up the volume during these difficult times, when mutual shouting matches on social media seemed to have become a main pastime of society.

This is one of those “projects” that I’ll keep doing from time to time – whenever a statement burns itself so deeply into my mind that the only way to get rid of it is to carve it into wood.

There are five bats so far. I am working on a few more. The first ones went really well, always nice when your gallerist calls and says: „Sold out. Give me more!“

At this point, a big thank you to everyone who’s been supporting me for years (heart emoji, heart emoji)! Can’t say it often enough!

The cinematic approach

Another series (and I almost always think in series, never in single images – maybe that’s my “cinematic” approach) that has been driving me this year is my studies of famous artists of the past who, in one way or another, have had a great significance for me.

Like all my work I take these projects very seriously: I read biographies, research the artistic development, embrace the times these artists lived and worked in, search for influences and encounters – all to finally choose one single work, which I then reinterpret using my own technique and style.

The finished pieces are meant to feel familiar, without the “originals” being immediately obvious.

Of course, the moment I reveal the artist’s name and the (new old) title, there’s no turning back – everyone starts looking for the original.

That has nothing to do with my intention, but it’s totally fine.

For me, this is primarily about grappling with both the artist and their work – and my personal identification with them.

All the pieces are the same format (50 x 70 cm, acrylic and woodcut on, well, wood) but completely different in how they were created. Especially in terms of how the paint was applied. And along the way, I’ve also experimented new woodcut techniques.

I began in January with Claude Monet („Waterlilies and Agapanthus“, 1923), then moved on to Egon Schiele („Four Trees“, 1917), dove into the painterly genius of J. M. William Turner („Evening Landscape with Bridge and Castle“, 1798-99), and finally worked with Max Ernst’s „Arbre solitaire et arbres conjugaux“ (1940).

Max Ernst – that was probably the most obvious choice for me.

Why? Here’s a little insight into my own biography:

Max Ernst (1891–1976) fascinated me back in school – probably because he was born in Brühl (near Cologne) and played a big role there. I was raised in Brühl, and I went to the high school named after him. My earliest exhibition visits back then were to the annual presentations of the Max Ernst Scholarship winners at the local information center, where my mother worked.

At that time, I was captivated by the Surrealists and deeply familiar with Max Ernst’s history and work. So from very early on, he was one of the most formative artists for me.

Today, there’s a wonderful Max Ernst Museum in Brühl. Back then, there was only a small cabinet – more like an archive – lovingly run by volunteers, and a plaque on his birthplace.

Without comparing myself to him, there are definitely parallels in my own artistic journey that might remind people of Max Ernst – perhaps most visible in the diversity and abrupt shifts of styles, techniques, series, and themes: the restless search for ways to express an insatiable mind.

Very much in Ernst’s spirit:

“For me, painting is neither decorative amusement nor the plastic invention of felt reality. It must always be: invention, discovery, revelation.”

And that, in a way, brings us full circle to the beginning of this rather long text.

In the introduction to a major Max Ernst exhibition at Fondation Beyeler in Basel in 2013, curators Raphaël Bouvier and Ioana Jimborean wrote:

“Max Ernst’s creativity in dealing with images and sources of inspiration, the ruptures between numerous phases and subjects, surprise the viewer. Like a revolutionary of vision, he recombined images, creating new connections between images and the viewer’s consciousness.What remains constant is the consistency of apparent contradiction.”

Two of the techniques Max Ernst experimented with and ultimately perfected were central to my reinterpretation of his 1940 work „Arbre solitaire et arbres conjugaux“:

The transfer technique of decalcomania and frottage.

While Max Ernst carefully (and masterfully) painted in the details after applying color, I instead used blades and my signature carving technique at that stage.

Across all four pieces in this series, I focused on the role of nature in each artist’s life and work.

As I mentioned before, I’ve been experimenting with techniques and deeply engaging with their biographies and artworks – and you can see this in many details of the final works, sometimes only on very close inspection.

If you take a close look at my latest woodcut, you might even spot hidden figures among the trees – just like Max Ernst used to do.

What else?

Today, I fired up the chainsaw again to carve new sculptures.

Very early stages, right now, it is more about organizing the tree trunks and finding potential shapes.

The trees (mostly beech) that I recently cut on my neighbor’s meadow and hauled back to my rural studio with my little gray tractor still need some time to dry. I’m also not entirely sure yet whether there’s really (or currently) the right material among them.

There’s also a chance I might get some cherry wood. We’ll see.

Working with wood always requires patience. And as I mentioned above - it is all a process, not a plan.

At the moment, some of my works are on display at MEGA Contemporary (location: The RANCH, Bäckerbreitergang 75) in the highly recommended group show HEAT, alongside Stefanie Rausch, Zhou Huang, Nicola Watson, and Max Klein.

On October 16th, there will also be an artist talk at the exhibition – I’ll send out a separate invitation for that. And yes, at that event, I’ll also explain why it’s so charming that Melvin invited me, even though he no longer represents me as an artist.

I’m just a small part of the group exhibition anyway, so really, there’s nothing to explain.

To make this even clearer: next year, I’ll be having my next solo show in Hamburg.

At Krüger. Feinkunst Krüger.

That’s right.

And in December of this years, there’s another chance to see my art in Hamburg – at Fabrik der Künste:

The wonderful Pedro Anacker has put together a truly illustrious group of Hamburg artists for a show called „Hamburger Hammer“.

The lineup includes Helena Rennkamp, Tina Oelker, Stefanie Rausch, 4000, Gideon Prix, Adam Jankowski, Dieter Glasmacher, Faouzi Al Kabbany, and of course, Pedro Anacker himself.

The opening will take place on Friday, December 5th, at 7 p.m.

And because all that isn’t enough, I’ll soon be heading to the Stuttgart area for a very special, incredibly exciting art project – but I can’t talk about that yet. More on that later.

And that’s enough for now.

Until next time: stay vigilant, take care of yourselves, keep fighting for democracy, freedom, and diversity in our society.

Fuck Trump & MAGA.

And fuck the AfD.

Yours,

Jörg

HEAT exhibition view at MEGA contemporary (in the background: work by Zhou Huang).
Save the date: Artist Talk October 16!



Evening Landscape

In my quest to figure out some of my early influences in art, I approached Joseph Mallord William Turner’s “Evening Landscape with Castle and Bridge in Yorkshire”, a watercolor dated between 1798 and 1799, using of course my own tools and techniques.

The work is a blend of painting and carving, 50 x 70 cm in size, and will be first shown at the “LANDPARTIE!” July 12, 2025 in Scheggerott, Angeln. Here’s all the info about the exhibition.

Below are some “work in progress images”. I was working in two carvings at the same time, using the same color palette and inspiration.

This work as well as the previous “Waterlilies and Agapanthus” (Monet) and “Four Trees” (Schiele) are part of a special project for the Geberit Collection.

True.

Just one more reminder to all my german friends: Please VOTE!

It is our chance to make these drawings come true, with a swift cross of your pen on the ballot for a NON-right wing party we can begin to erase (or at least dampen) the current nightmare.

This video is from the last (and lost) election in Europe 2024. And unfortunately even more important now.

Thank you.

P.S.: For those who do not know the background of „This machine kills fascists“ - Woodie Guthrie had these words on his guitar, and many artists (including me) use this in their work.


Water Lilies and Agapanthus (2025)

First work of the year:

Water Lilies and Agapanthus (2025)
Acrylic paint, carved wood. 50 x 70 x 3 cm

Here’s something new I am currently exploring. I mentioned in my last newsletter that I usually reserve the time around Christmas and the New Year to calm down, read books about famous artists (this year it’s Monet all the way), admiring and analyzing their work, wandering in their shoes and in their times for a bit, feeling how they might’ve felt – and contemplating what I (the artist) want (need!) to be doing next. There all all these ideas, thoughts, rough concepts, the nonsense and the rage, swirling around in my head. Nothing really to hold on to, but that is anyway not what I am aiming for – I try to be as free as I can in this phase. No restraints. And no pressure.

So for my first time spent in the studio this year I approached a painting from impressionist Claude Monet from 1923, called „Water Lilies and Agapanthus“, painted in his famous garden in Giverny.

I carved and painted this in my famous old farmhouse house in the countryside, middle of nowhere, up North. I hope it gives you joy.


If you are interested in this work, please contact my studio manager Dorian by mail.

Archiving & new Book

Archiving my drawings 1 to 490 *.


I always said as soon as I reach 500 drawings I will release them as a book. Ideally in a high-end Manga-like jewel of a publication. And now I will: together with the amazing people from Gudberg Nerger.

Click image to download most current drawing overview. Status: 08.07.24

Almost there. Ten drawings to go. You just wait and see ;)

PS: If you are in Copenhagen end of August: Galerie Bludin Berisha will show a bunch of these works at their booth at ENTER art fair . Summer only just begun …

And yes, please continue buying the drawings as they in the end will most likely finance the book.

* why the asterisk? Ah yes, cos I wanted to let you know that many of the drawings I am archiving here are only printouts - from the ones sold. If you want to know which ones are available: drop me a mail, or download the PDF here.

GONAKADET

GONAKADET (2024)
Woodcut, acrylic paint, 63 x 53 x 4 cm

The Gonakadet, commonly referred to as the Sea-Wolf, is a mythical creature in the Tlingit tradition of the Pacific Northwest Coast of North America. Simultaneously strong, generous and humble, the Sea-Wolf was said to bring great luck and wealth to anyone fortunate enough to spy it, or hear its soulful howl.

Gonakadet is said to be inspired by the Vancouver coastal sea wolves, which are found in the Great Bear Rainforest and in northern Vancouver Island.

This work was specifically created for the exhibition ULVEN+ at Galerie Wolfsen, Aalborg. Opening of the exhibition is Saturday, June 22. It is also the celebration of the 60’s birthday of gallery founder Kent Wolfsen. A great gallerist always has some Gonakadet in her/him - Kent for sure does.

PS: Sound samples used in the video above are from Pigeon Hole’s „Wolf Pack“ and „The Island of the Sea Wolves“, spoken by Will Arnett

Everything must end some day: Finissage February 29!

It has been a wonderful couple of weeks (months really ;)) since my latest exhibition ”They all must be slaughtered” was opened in December 2023. Now it all comes to an end:

Please celebrate with me the Finissage of this very special show

on Thursday, February 29, from 5 - 9 pm

at The MISSION by heliumcowboy
Kaiser-Wilhelm-Str. 87, 20355 Hamburg.

Apart from this event, you can visit Wednesdays - Fridays 2 – 6 pm.

Below are some new images from the new works we released last week during the exhibition. And for all the imformation about the show - continue to read here!

All about: 'THEY ALL MUST BE SLAUGHTERED' Exhibition

Ok. Got four minutes and your speakers on? Above is a walkthrough of my new exhibition, including sound. You really should watch till the end (surprise awaits). This is how my new show „They all must be slaughtered“ is presented at The MISSION by heliumcowboy.

The song „They all must be slaughtered“ by the Melvins runs on constant repeat (from Vinyl), and together with the light setting it creates the unique, dark and apocalyptic athmosphere I wanted for this exhibition, which is more like a play on a stage than just a show of artworks.

Continue reading (and view more images from the exhibition and the opening)

Exhibition until March 2, 2024
Open wednesdays - fridays 14 – 18 h

Exhibition Location:
The MISSION by heliumcowboy
Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße 87, Hamburg

STORM

Storm (2023)
Carved wood, acrylic paint
30 x 50 x 3 cm

This year will be a lot about waves and the forces of nature with me.

What becomes of the brokenhearted (2023)

“What becomes of the brokenhearted”

50 x 30 x 3 cm
Carved wood, acrylic paint

May 2023

Mountain to Surf II

Be patient, this video is a bit longer. BUT ☝️:

this is the Work In Progress-(also know as „Jörg in Progress“) Video from me working on this massive woodcut (only the carving part). Like one week of sharp blades in 3 minutes. I hope you make it through.

Also: I recorded this cover of Townes van Zandt’s „Colorado Girl“ back in summer 2020 outdoors on the porch of our country house in the North, so you may be hearing some birds singing along. Play it loud, as all music should be.

Take some time out, and enjoy.

Mountain to Surf II (2023)
Woodcut, Acryllic paint, 70 x 100 x 3 cm.

"Seen through the waves"

First work of the year is always something special:

Seen through the waves (January 2023)
Woodcut, acrylic paint, 40 x 50 x 3 cm

check availabilty sold

Tiny bit of the WIP. More on my Instagram

Back to the Future @ heliumcowboy

THIS IS ALL I CAME TO DO, 2022
Acrylic paint, oil pastels, indian ink, ripped fabric and modelling paste on canvas, in artist frame. 153 x 123 cm | check availability

Here are some impressions from my new work „This is all I came to do“ currently in the Exhibition “Back to the Future“ at the heliumcowboy gallery.

The exhibition is open until January 27, 2023.
Opening hours: Wednesdays to Fridays 3-6 pm

Artwork Detail:

THIS IS ALL I CAME TO DO, 2022
Acrylic paint, oil pastels, indian ink, ripped fabric and modelling paste on canvas, in artist frame. 153 x 123 cm
check availability

Artists of the exhibition:

Anne Athena Jon Burgerman, Victor Castillo, Alex Diamond, Boris Hoppek, Christophe Lambert, Susannah Martin, Jens Rausch, David Shillinglaw, Julia Soboleva, Jon Todd, Nicola Watson, Fabian Wolf, Mara Yuki | more info


EXHIBITION VIEWS:

DETAILS:

Don't wake Daddy #17 @ Feinkunst Krüger

Exhibition view alongside work of Alexandra Lukaschewitz (sculptures foreground), Hazel Ang (left), Fred Stonehouse and Heiko Müller. (Photo by Heiko Müller)

Always wonderful to be part of the annual supergroupshow “Don’t wake Daddy” at Feinkunst Krüger, curated by Heiko Müller.

I present 3 works - see below.

Artist in this years edition:

Alex Diamond, Alexandra Lukaschewitz, Allison Sommers, Andrew Cadima, Atak, Babs Webb, Brad Woodfin, Caitlin McCormack, Chris Leib, Dave Cooper, Dewi Plass, Elmar Lause, Femke Hiemstra, Fred Stonehouse, Gregory Hergert, Hazel Ang, Heiko Müller, Jan Thomas, Jason Limon, Jeff Soto, Jesús Aguado, Johnny Akihito Noda, Juliet Schreckinger, Marcus Schäfer, Marc Burckhardt, moki, Pamela Tait, Paul Neberra, Ryan Heshka, Susanne König und Tanja Hirschfeld

More info and availability: check with Feinkunst Krüger

ARTWORK:

The Walker (2022)

Acrylic paint, oil pastels, indian ink, ripped fabric and modelling paste on canvas, in artist frame, 82 x 62 x 5 cm

We let the Stars go (2022)

Acrylic paint, oil pastels, indian ink on canvas, in artist frame, 82 x 62 x 5 cm

I count the hours (2022)
Acrylic paint, oil pastels, indian ink on canvas, in artist frame
52 x 42 x 5 cm

EXHIBITION VIEWS (by Heiko Müller)

Experiments in Technicolor

A couple of weeks now I have been working on a new direction in colors, experimenting on canvas and wood, with acrylic and oil stick and dark black Indian ink and brushes and carving knives … not complaining here but the path to new structures and evolutions in my work often goes hand in hand with an inner struggle, and during these phases I am maybe not the easiest person to be around, so I seek solitude in my studio in the North, and avoid people, but that is a conflict too, because I am a social person as well, and have a loving family, so I go around in circles somewhat and can never be really satisfied with the process (let alone the results) of my work.

But that’s okay. I think I will never be fully satisfied with my art, at least not for very long, which also is a great motivator to never stop exploring.

First work of the black series: "The Balance"

210925_BLACKSERIES_01_6444-Bearbeitet.jpg

So I have finished this first work from the new “black series” of multi-layered woodcut-paintings … initially to be shown at my December exhibition with Victor Castillo, but hey, surprise surprise that was postponed yet again, new date to be announced. Anyway …

I am very happy with the result and am looking forward to move further with this body of work. Stay tuned.

The Balance (2021)
Cut and carved wood, acrylic paint
105 x 85 x 7,5 cm (41.4 x 33.5 x 3 inches)

Some details: