The exhibition Raimund Kummer. Sublunar interference in the Hamburger Bahnhof - Museum for Contemporary Art - Berlin shows four large-scale sculptural works by the Berlin sculptor from different phases of his work. The works, created between 1979 and 2017, deal with the topic of seeing and are being presented together for the first time in a retrospective.
“Every place can be a possible place for art.” Raimund Kummers (born 1954) interventions in urban space since the end of the 1970s as well as the forms of presentation he developed are due to an understanding of art that no longer separates the place of creation and the place of publication of the work of art separates. The associated works - temporary installations, sound, photo productions, sculptures and photographic and film works - can be traced back to the starting point of Kummer's work: real space.
The title “Sublunar Interference” is a poetic reference to the question of light and seeing as possible forms of knowledge. “Interference” is an action term that is translated into the cosmic by the attribute “sublunar”. This describes the limitless field of activity of art and the cross-genre framework of Kummer's oeuvre. Essential to his sculptures is a question derived from the experimental material relationship and its practical answer, not the theoretical discourse of conceptual designs.
The exhibition begins with the photo projection Sculptures in the Street (1978/1979) from the National Gallery collection, which consists of photographs of random constellations of stored materials, construction sites and processes. As a criticism of the academicization of conceptual art and minimal art at the end of the 1970s, the work refers to the strategy of an aesthetic found in real space.