Natalie Häusler

Hello from Rue Desert

4 March – 15 April 2017

March 4, 2017 6-9pm

Natalie Häusler
Rue Desert (No.5), 2017
Acrylic and oil pastel on wood
19.5 x 14.5 x 1.5 cm
Natalie Häusler
Rue Desert (No.9), 2017
Acrylic and oil pastel on wood
19.5 x 14.5 x 1.5 cm
Natalie Häusler
Vacuum Bed No. 1 (Eric), 2016
Plaster, latex, rope, wire, metal, wood, plastic tube, vakuum pump, timer
210 x 110 x 50 cm
Natalie Häusler
Vacuum Bed No. 1 (Eric), 2016
Plaster, latex, rope, wire, metal, wood, plastic tube, vakuum pump, timer
210 x 110 x 50 cm
Natalie Häusler
Vacuum Bed No. 2 (Christine), 2016
Plaster, latex, rope, wire, metal, wood, plastic tube, vakuum pump, timer
210 x 110 x 50 cm
Natalie Häusler
Vacuum Bed No. 2 (Christine), 2016
Plaster, latex, rope, wire, metal, wood, plastic tube, vakuum pump, timer
210 x 110 x 50 cm
Natalie Häusler
The Source / Die Quelle (for Josephine Saladyak), 2017
Ceramic tiles, stained glass, mortar, fountain pump, plastic hose, copper pipe, wood
347 x 90 x 45 cm
Natalie Häusler
The Source / Die Quelle (for Josephine Saladyak), 2017
Ceramic tiles, stained glass, mortar, fountain pump, plastic hose, copper pipe, wood
347 x 90 x 45 cm
Natalie Häusler
The Source / Die Quelle (for Josephine Saladyak), 2017
Ceramic tiles, stained glass, mortar, fountain pump, plastic hose, copper pipe, wood
347 x 90 x 45 cm
Natalie Häusler
The Bird, 2017
Parrot feathers, clockwork
approx.: ø 60 cm
Natalie Häusler, "Hello from Rue Desert"
Installation view at Supportico Lopez, 2017
Natalie Häusler
Trampoline Bed No.2 (Eric), 2016
(detail)
Natalie Häusler
Trampoline Bed No.2 (Eric). 2016, 2016
plaster, latex, latex tubes, metal, wood
200 x 90 x 50 cm
Natalie Häusler, "Hello from Rue Desert"
Installation view at Supportico Lopez, 2017
Natalie Häusler
The (Hello) Tree, 2017
Acrylic on passepartout
Dimensions variable

Natalie Häusler
The (Hello) Tree, 2017
Acrylic on passepartout
Dimensions variable
Natalie Häusler, "Hello from Rue Desert"
Installation view at Supportico Lopez, 2017
Works: The (Hello) Tree, acrylic on passepartout; The Sun, moving-head spotlight, orange light filter
Natalie Häusler, "Hello from Rue Desert"
Installation view at Supportico Lopez, 2017
Natalie Häusler, "Hello from Rue Desert"
Installation view at Supportico Lopez, 2017
Natalie Häusler, "Hello from Rue Desert"
Installation view at Supportico Lopez, 2017
Natalie Häusler, "Hello from Rue Desert"
Installation view at Supportico Lopez, 2017
Natalie Häusler, "Hello from Rue Desert"
Installation view at Supportico Lopez, 2017
Natalie Häusler
Hello from Rue Desert, 2017
photomontage, 14,8 x 10,5 cm

March 4th, 2017

She is bell and he is beau. Hello from Rue Desert.

Q: “I’m trying to say that a house is on a deserted dirt road. According to the dictionary, a deserted road is une rue déserte and a dirt road is a chemin en terre. How do I combine these 2? Should I use ‘chemin’ or ‘rue’? And which adjective comes first? Thank you!”

A: “What you have here is a dirt road, that is deserted. I would use chemin. Chemin is masculine, so désert.
Un chemin de terre désert. Sur un chemin de terre abandonné… ?” [1]

I am constructing environments.

The locus amoenus is subversive but not private. It is not a solitary place, locus solus, but one of sociability. Love making, singing and even storytelling may take place here: See the shepherds of Theokrit, the lovers of Colonna, or the meeting of a group of storytellers in a locus amoenus, fleeing the plague in Boccaccio’s Decameron.

The locus amoenus is primordial and quite literary, archaic and mediated through texts, conceived of by poets and architects: Architexture. [2]

The locus amoenus is a focal point of social organization. [3]

It consists of a basic set of recurring elements:
A Tree, A Source of Water, Sunshine, and The Song of Birds.

The (Hello) Tree, a fig tree, is said to have aphrodisiac effects and is also associated with a tendency to attract suicides. Only after Adam and Eve eat from the tree of knowledge in the Garden of Eden do they become aware of their own nudity.

The hands of the tree said hi to me. That was obvious.

The exhibition animates a linguistic presence in its environment, yet not one that heavy-handedly carries out a modern conflict of signification and the loss of words’ symbolic power. It is the language of poetry that is active. It has a secret intimacy with the Tree, Sun, Water, who say Hello, and wave their hands. It is a language where form bears meaning and therefore can still relate to the natural world as a place that we talk to. [4]

[1] Conversation taken from a translation blog.
[2] Über Typus und Ort. Protokoll eines Gespräches mit Oswald Matthias Ungers, Lexikon der Linguistik, Locus Amoenus, Just Fernández López
[3] Das Umkippen des ‘locus amoenus’ in einen ‘locus terribilis’., Bettina Schwalb, 2013
[4] Notes on “Hello from Rue Desert”, Christine Schott, 2017

* Thanks to GOLEM Kunst- und Baukeramik, Sieversdorf for the kind support