
This webpage won't be updated anylonger.
Please visit: www.gerhardsengerner.com
    
    ![]()
    
    
 
    
    
    ![]()
     
    
 
    
    
    Previous shows:
    Carrall Dunham – Recent Paintings, 2008
    Carroll Dunham – Monotypes, 2007
    Carroll Dunham – Dead Space, 2005
    Carroll Dunham – Prints, 2004
    Carroll Dunham – Meso-kingdom, The Search for 
    Orgone 2002
Carroll Dunham – Meso-kingdom, The Search for Orgone, 2002

    
    Jan 12–Mar 2, 2002
    
    For his first extensive solo show in Berlin, the American-born artist Carroll 
    Dunham chose paintings and drawings of two new series called “The Search 
    for Orgone” and “Meso-kingdom” as well as a group of prints.
    
    Dunham is well-known for his bizarre, comic-related figures and his preoccupation 
    with the human psyche. Both also play a role in his new artworks. The main 
    motif of his paintings and drawings – executed in black & white 
    only – is a male character seen in profile. This character is indicated 
    by a few prominent signs such as his hat and jacket, but most remarkable are 
    his grossly large teeth and a nose shaped like a penis. Mostly it is only 
    the head that is seen in front of a landscape or an adumbrated city silhouette. 
    The title “Search for Orgone” refers to Dunham's interest in the 
    psychoanalyst Wilhelm Reich and his so-called Theory of Orgone (a further 
    development of Freud's Theory of the Libido). 
    
    The series “Meso-kingdom” focuses more on the landscape or the 
    surrounding of the character itself. Typical of Dunham's modus operandi is 
    the vague mental starting point of the picture that only gradually takes form 
    as it is being made. Considering such, the drawings are as significant as 
    the paintings for the artist. The 13 exposed lithographs take on the broad 
    theme of "relationships". These coloured ‘Female Portraits’ 
    have a more organic feel in comparison to the male figure in all the other 
    works; they are only surrounded by a freehand rectangle on a neutral background.