THE INTERVIEW IN|DEEDS: WHO IS … Virginia Glasmacher

PROLOGUE | PERSONAL

Virginia, imagine you would welcome us in your studio or home. Where do we talk together, where do we meet you? We would meet in my studio, a light modern space surrounded by historic buildings on the outskirts of Wetzlar, about 80km from Frankfurt. Perhaps we are sitting in your favourite place? My favourite place is in front the canvas which I’m working on at the moment. You were born in Richmond (Virginia) in the USA in 1969. Today you live and work in Wetzlar, Germany. What stations and people have particularly shaped you in your life so far? My family spent a couple of years in the USA in the late 1960ies and moved back to Germany in the early 1970ies. I grew up in in a small town south of Munich in the “Blue Rider”-countryside. One of my earliest memories is a class trip to the Lenbachhaus in Munich, where I was awestruck by Franz Marc’s “Tiger” and returned to sit in front of it for hours on end with my sketchbook for years after.  In retrospect, a kind of “awakening” moment, the first time I remember being lost in the sensation of colour.

DEEDS WORLD - courtesy of the artist and Galerie Kremers - Virginia Glasmacher in her Studio 4

Virginia Glasmacher in her Studio, Wetzlar, 2023

Which writers do you find exciting at the moment and which books can be found on your bookshelf? I love the voices of contemporary female writers such as Meg Wolitzer (The Interestings) and am often drawn to books exploring cross-cultural or gender-identities such as Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Americanah or Bernadine Evaristo’s Girl, Woman, Other. Which books have influenced or shaped you? Many, but these are on my mind at the moment: Martin Gayford’s Man with a Blue Scarf: On sitting for a Portrait by Lucian Freud, Erling Kagge’s Silence in the Age of Noise and the art world documentary The Price of Everything by Nathaniel Kahn. What are you currently reading and where does the book lie at hand? Stolen Focus by Johann Hari is on the shelf next to my bed. What music do you listen to and when? In the studio I listen to classical music (mostly Bach, Chopin, Schubert); when I’m at home my taste is more eclectic & contemporary.

DEEDS WORLD - courtesy of the artist and Galerie Kremers - Virginia Glasmacher in her Studio 5

Virginia Glasmacher in her Studio, Wetzlar, 2023

If you were to cook something for us, what would it be? I would probably make something including chickpeas or black lentils, which seem to find their way in to almost everything I make. What is your favourite food? See above, along with butternut squash, French cheese and chocolate. What do you think about breakfast? Small and basic on weekdays, hours on end with family or friends on the weekend. What kind of sport or compensation do you do for your artistic work? I have a yoga mat in my studio, ready to do a few downward dogs or sun salutations on while paint layers are drying. Do you have any special passions (hobbies) that you are passionate about, and if so, which ones? I love to cook and enjoy winding down with a new Ottolenghi recipe after a day in the studio. What personality trait particularly defines you? –

DEEDS WORLD - courtesy of the artist and Galerie Kremers - Virginia Glasmacher in her Studio

Virginia Glasmacher in her Studio, Wetzlar, 2023

INTERVIEW | ARTIST + POSITION

We would like to briefly introduce your artistic career. From 1989 to 1993 you studied art and semiotics at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island and art history at New York University in the USA. In 2001 you took part in the International Summer Academy of Art in Salzburg, in Zhou Brothers’ painting class. Did we miss anything? If so, tell us about other stages of your artistic education.

How did you get into art? Why art?

I changed school when I was 16 and spent the last two years at a British boarding school near London. For the first time art class was not about assignments – we were encouraged to work independently in the studio. My art teacher expected us to keep a written journal alongside our studio work and challenged me to reflect in writing on what I was seeing and experiencing. His cryptic and thought-provoking remarks in the margins of my journal and in class along with the freedom to explore set me on my path into the artworld.

DEEDS WORLD - courtesy of the artist and Galerie Kremers - Virginia Glasmacher - Kadmiumrot-Ocker-Kadmiumgrün

Virginia Glasmacher, Cadmium red Ochre Cadmium green, 2023, 100x180cm

What is currently making you happy?

Painting, especially the moment you realise a good painting is done.

What is currently scaring you?

The international political landscape, environmental issues, but I try not to focus too much on things I can’t influence.

DEEDS WORLD - courtesy of the artist and Galerie Kremers - Virginia Glasmacher in her Studio 3

Virginia Glasmacher in her Studio, Wetzlar, 2023

Do you believe that art has a social responsibility? And what do you think it can achieve?

Art can play a very important role in raising awareness but this is more relevant for some artists than for others. What I think is more important in terms of social responsibility is that art is made accessible to as widespread an audience as possible through education.

What characterises your art? What is your work about – what are the central themes?

For the past 20 years I have been interested in the interface of abstraction and landscape. The perception and experience of nature are points of departure, from which I build images which can be perceived as “colour-landscapes” or “painting-landscapes”. I am particularly interested in the relationship of the structures and materials (pigments, binders, paint brush/squeegee) and how they define the structure, rhythm and dynamism of the narrative of the image. I work in the tradition of Art informel and the exploration of a broad range of means of expression plays a central role in my work.

Read Virginia Glasmacher’s response to her work further in THE DEED | DAS WERK.

DEEDS WORLD - courtesy of the artist and Galerie Kremers - Virginia Glasmacher - Ultramarin-Coelin

Virginia Glasmacher, Vista, Ultramarine Coelin, 2018, 130x120cm

How do you protect yourself from too much inspiration in today’s times?

I try to focus on what is up next in my studio and on pushing myself to continuously explore and evolve.

How much of your work is planned in advance – how much arises intuitively?

My work is process-based, intuition plays a big part.

DEEDS WORLD - courtesy of the artist and Galerie Kremers - Virginia Glasmacher - Studio in Wetzlar

Studio in Wetzlar, 2023

What are your (next) goals?

I’m interested in exploring large formats.

What is your position on the subject of faith? Do you have principles of faith or is there a motto?

– 

Which project would you still like to realise if a lack of time, courage or financial resources did not play a role?

Good question, maybe a large site-specific work for an architectural space.

DEEDS WORLD - courtesy of the artist and Galerie Kremers - Virginia Glasmacher in her Studio 2

Virginia Glasmacher in her Studio, Wetzlar, 2023

In your view, what are the attributes of good art?

Beauty, conceptual or formal rigour.

Is one born as an artist? Or is studying art compulsory?

I think you need a passion, an unquestioned commitment to making art to fuel a life-long artistic journey but formal training is also important.

DEEDS WORLD - courtesy of the artist and Galerie Kremers - Virginia Glasmacher in her Studio 1

Virginia Glasmacher in her Studio, Wetzlar, 2023

Who do you show a new work to first?

My husband or my sisters.

What does the first hour of your day look like?

Family duties (sending our two kids off to school) followed by a walk in the forest.

DEEDS WORLD - courtesy of the artist and Galerie Kremers - Virginia Glasmacher - Studio in Wetzlar 1

Studio in Wetzlar, 2023

In the age of the Internet of Things, are galleries still necessary? If so, why and for what?

-Galleries definitively still play a very important role in facilitating understanding of an artist’s work and bringing together artists and collectors even if digital channels increasingly gain importance as sources of inspiration.

Social media – blessing or curse?   

I think social media is a valuable resource for connecting with the art community around the world. But it takes a lot of will power and discipline to limit time and energy spent online.

EPILOGUE | CURRENT

The exhibition Virginia Glasmacher – New works can be seen from 18. Februar to 25. March 2023 in the Galerie Kremers, Schmiedehof 17, 10965 BerlinKreuzberg. The gallery can be reached at info@galerie-kremers.de, Ph: +49 30 46 99 80 68 or cell phone: +49 176 64 72 72 47.

www.virginia-glasmacher.de

www.instagram.com/virginiaglasmacher


The DEEDS interviews are not edited or shortened by our editorial team and are always reproduced in original sound. Therefore, we do not translate the interview into English or German unless the interviewee submits a translation or we are entrusted with the translation. Here, the English version of the interview was submitted by the artist.

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