Regina Zachhalmel
japanischer Gast, 2018
Regina Zachhalmel
(born 1963 in St. Pölten, Lower Austria)
japanischer Gast, 2018, for the art in print series women I
Etching, line etching combined with soft ground etching (textile impression) of two by two plates on Zerkall German Etch Intaglio, printed by Tom Phelan, Blackspot Press, Vienna.
Edition of 33 + 5 AP + 2 EP + 1 PP
Signed,dated, titled and numbered by the artist, embossed stamp Blackspot Press
Plate size each 29.5 x 19.4 cm
40 x 50 cm
Regina Zachhalmel
1963// born in St. Pölten – lives and works in Vienna
1990–1996// Degree course at the Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna
1996 // Degree in Painting and Graphics
2003 // PhD in Aesthetics, Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna
Selection of exhibitions
2017 // , ecoart, Vienna
Sommerausstellung 2017, rittergallery, Klagenfurt
taktil, kunst:werk, St. Pölten
2016 // Accrochage 2016, rittergallery, Klagenfurt
Sommer 2016 // rittergallery, Klagenfurt
30x30x30, International Group Exhibition, Galerie zs-art, Vienna
About the artist
In her works, Regina Zachhalmel deals with the perception of everyday and image culture, whereby central categories of the artwork such as the motif, the shaping process, value, appearance and interpretation are renegotiated. The result is configurations that knowingly question traditions in production and reception. Originality and uncontrollability in the sense of the incidental are knowingly provoked components of the cycle of work.
But the motif itself isn’t of primary interest, it’s much more about what happens in the artistic examination. Using different media formats that are usually arranged into multi-part series or blocks, set pieces of banal everyday life, as well as art and cultural history, are intertwined in a wide-ranging and associative network. In a process of artistic upgrading, predominantly cheaply produced raw materials (such as canopies, fabric bags and other mass-produced textiles) are used to create an independent character for the piece. The object is aesthetically upgraded and reinterpreted through the intervention of the artist. In doing so, children’s hats, for example, are carefully taken apart, disassembled into their individual pieces, painted, reshaped and put back together in a novel way. The product regains its interest. In the artwork , this is achieved using cheap industrially made strips that are given a second chance.
In her work, the artist scrutinises valid concepts of value and work by equally questioning the terms of production and reception in everyday life and in art.