Michel Majerus (June 9, 1967 – November 6, 2002) was a Luxembourgish artist who combined painting with digital media in his work.[1] He lived and worked in Berlin until his untimely death in a plane crash in November 2002.[2]

Michel Majerus
Black and white close-up portrait of a man
Majerus in Berlin in 2000, photographed by Oliver Mark
Born(1967-06-09)9 June 1967
Esch-sur-Alzette (Luxembourg)
Died6 November 2002(2002-11-06) (aged 35)
NationalityLuxembourgish
Known fordigital painting appropriation (art)
Stylepostmodernism neo-pop digital art neo-expressionism

Early life and education

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Majerus was born in Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg, in 1967. In 1986, Majerus began to study at the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart, graduating in 1992.[3]

 
Michel Majerus painting what looks good today may not look good tomorrow (2000) at the Museum of Modern Art in 2022

In 1992, together with his fellow students from Stuttgart Nader (Ahriman), Stephan Jung, Susa Reinhardt and Wawa (Wawrzyniec) Tokarski, Majerus co-founded the artist group 3K-NH for which they used the initials of their nicknames to form a cryptic name. 3K-NH held exhibitions both in Stuttgart and Berlin.[4] In 1993, Majerus and Jung moved to Berlin.[5]

Painting was Majerus’s preferred medium of expression, but his creative horizon extended to many aspects of popular culture, from computer games, digital art, film, television, and pop music to trademarks and corporate logos and famous artists.[6] His paintings' stylistic quotations included copying aspects of works by Andy Warhol, Willem de Kooning and Jean-Michel Basquiat,[7] video games and other pop-culture sources.[8] In 1996, Majerus began his MoM Block series, comprising more than 170 canvases. MoM is an abbreviation of Modehaus Mitte, a former fashion factory in East Berlin, in which Majerus had his studio for a while.[9]

Majerus did not limit himself to two-dimensional surfaces, but painted installations which surround the viewer.[10] For a 1994 show at his Berlin gallery Neugerriemschneider, he asked that a road be paved inside the modest exhibition space.[11] In 1999, at the invitation of curator Harald Szeemann, he painted the façade of the international pavilion in the Giardini of the Venice Biennale.[12] For his largest work, if you are dead, so it is (2000), Majerus covered the interior surface of a 370 m2 (4,000 sq ft)[13] skateboarders' half-pipe.[14]

After moving to Los Angeles in 2000 through the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD), Majerus began work on a series of thirty large-format paintings incorporating digital media and animated videos. Completed in Berlin the following year, the series eventually comprised over thirty works.[15] Nine of these works would eventually become the Pop Reloaded exhibition in Los Angeles. Pop Reloaded emphasized the visual confusion of the urban landscapes and the scale of freeway billboards and office towers. It drew on works by Cy Twombly, Mark Rothko and Gerhard Richter. The paintings were accompanied by a video of a constantly changing image of Majerus's signature, to illustrate the idea of celebrity as a constantly changing concept.[16]

In 2002, shortly after his return to Berlin from Los Angeles, Majerus installed a life-size photograph of a Brutalist social housing block directly in front of the East side of Brandenburg Gate;[17] the other side was taken over by a work of Thomas Bayrle.[18] Majerus was working on an exhibition entitled "Project Space" for Tate Liverpool when he died.[19]

Exhibitions

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Majerus's artwork first came to international attention in 1996 with an exhibition at the Kunsthalle in Stuttgart, and then with subsequent exhibitions in Munster and Dundee (Colour Me Blind! - Painting In The Age of Computer Games And Comics, 2000).[20] In 1996 the Kunsthalle Basel organized a mid-career museum retrospective.[21]

In 1998, Majerus was invited to participate in Manifesta 2.[22] He participated in the Venice Biennale in 1999, where he covered the facade of the main Italian Pavilion with a mural he designed.[23]

Since his death in 2002, several museums have organized exhibitions of Majerus’s work, including the Hamburger Bahnhof (2003), the Tate Liverpool (2004), the Kunsthaus Graz (2005), and the Kunstmuseum Stuttgart (2011).[24] A posthumous exhibition of his works was featured at the Kunstmuseum of Wolfsburg (Germany) in 2003. Entitled “Painting Pictures”, the exhibition was a celebration of Majerus's genre and was dedicated to his memory. Other painters represented in “Painting Pictures” included Takashi Murakami, Sarah Morris, Franz Ackermann, Matthew Ritchie, Torben Giehler and Erik Parker. Commencing in 2005, approximately two hundred of Majerus's works have been displayed as the "European Retrospective" travelling exhibition. The exhibition was a collaboration between the Majerus family and the Galerie Neugerriemschneider, Berlin. It included works usually displayed at the Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin, the Kunsthaus - Landesmuseum Joanneum, Graz and from private collections throughout the world (Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Spain, Germany, Great-Britain, Greece, Italy, Luxembourg, Mexico, Portugal, USA).[citation needed].

In 2018, the Institute of Contemporary Art Boston included a painting by Majerus in a survey of art after the internet, placing it within the context of works by Jon Rafman, Cao Fei, Avery Singer, and others.[25][26] His first museum survey in the United States opened at the ICA Miami in 2022.[27] Opening twenty years after the death was the exhibition series called Michel Majerus 2022 which was presented at the KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Neuer Berliner Kunstverein, Kunstverein in Hamburg.[28]

Death

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In November 2002, Majerus was killed aboard Luxair Flight 9642 while travelling from Berlin to Luxembourg.[29]

Influence

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In 2013, artist Thomas Bayrle played with elements from two of Majerus’s paintings to create a silk-screened wallpaper called Majerus (Smudge Tool/XXX) I (2013).[30] In 2020, Takashi Murakami made paintings that borrow from some of Majerus’s imagery.[31] In 2024, The Michel Majerus Estate presented a project calledLet’s Play Majerus G3 based on the G3 Apple computer from Majerus’s archive that was organized by artist Cory Arcangel in cooperation with the digital art organization Rhizome.[32]

References

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  1. ^ "Project Space: Michael Majerus. Pop Reloaded". Euromuse.net. February 2004. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-07-30.
  2. ^ Project Space: Michel Majerus, January 24 – April 18, 2004 Tate Liverpool.
  3. ^ [1] Was Michel Majerus the Most Important Artist of His Generation? A Global Reappraisal of the Painter Has Now Reached U.S. Shores
  4. ^ Michel Majerus: Early Works, 22 October 22 – 15 January 23 KW Institute for Contemporary Art.
  5. ^ Michel Majerus: Early Works, 22 October 22 – 15 January 23 KW Institute for Contemporary Art.
  6. ^ Project Space: Michel Majerus, January 24 – April 18, 2004 Tate Liverpool.
  7. ^ Dorothy Spears (October 25, 2013), Galleries as the Art World’s Leading Indicators New York Times.
  8. ^ Michel Majerus, February 8 - April 19, 2014 Matthew Marks Gallery, New York.
  9. ^ [Michel Majerus, MoM Block nr. 27, 1998] Städel.
  10. ^ Michel Majerus: "what looks good today may not look good tomorrow", June 24 - October 16, 2005 Archived February 3, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam.
  11. ^ Andrew Russeth (30 November 2022), Michel Majerus Saw the Future — 20 Years Ago New York Times.
  12. ^ Michel Majerus: Early Works, 22 October 22 – 15 January 23 KW Institute for Contemporary Art.
  13. ^ Michel Majerus Matthew Marks Gallery.
  14. ^ Michel Majerus, May 31 - September 23, 2012 Centre d'arts plastiques contemporains de Bordeaux.
  15. ^ Project Space: Michel Majerus, January 24 – April 18, 2004 Tate Liverpool.
  16. ^ Project Space: Michel Majerus, January 24 – April 18, 2004 Tate Liverpool.
  17. ^ Holland Cotter (3 April 2014), Where Blue-Chip Brands Meet Brassy Outliers New York Times.
  18. ^ Provokation: Sozialpalast statt Brandenburger Tor Berliner Morgenpost, 07 September 2002.
  19. ^ Project Space: Michel Majerus, January 24 – April 18, 2004 Tate Liverpool.
  20. ^ "Exhibition Archive". www.dca.ednet.co.uk. Dundee Contemporary Arts. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  21. ^ Michel Majerus, February 8 - April 19, 2014 Matthew Marks Gallery, New York.
  22. ^ artists Manifesta Biennale
  23. ^ Michel Majerus, February 8 - April 19, 2014 Matthew Marks Gallery, New York.
  24. ^ Michel Majerus, February 8 - April 19, 2014 Matthew Marks Gallery, New York.
  25. ^ Nadja Sayej (2 February 2018), Creativity in the digital age: how has the internet affected the art world? The Guardian.
  26. ^ Alex Greenberger (28 November 2022), 20 Years Ago, Michel Majerus Predicted Where Painting Would Be Today. He Was Right. ARTnews.
  27. ^ Andrew Russeth (30 November 2022), Michel Majerus Saw the Future — 20 Years Ago New York Times.
  28. ^ Michel Majerus: Early Works, 22 October 22 – 15 January 23 KW Institute for Contemporary Art.
  29. ^ Morrison, Donald A Coming-Out Party. TIME. Wednesday 28 February 2007. Retrieved on 1 November 2009.
  30. ^ Andrew Russeth (30 November 2022), Michel Majerus Saw the Future — 20 Years Ago New York Times.
  31. ^ Andrew Russeth (30 November 2022), Michel Majerus Saw the Future — 20 Years Ago New York Times.
  32. ^ [2] Michel Majerus Estate

Further reading

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  • Grosenick, Uta; Riemschneider, Burkhard, eds. (2005). Art Now (25th anniversary ed.). Köln: Taschen. pp. 180–183. ISBN 9783822840931. OCLC 191239335.
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