© Estate Michel Majerus

pop reloaded, 2000
Installation view at Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin
Estate Michel Majerus
courtesy neugerriemschneider, Berlin


Michel Majerus
what looks good today may not look good tomorrow



When Michel Majerus passed away in 2002, at the age of 35, he left behind an impressive oeuvre.


He did not limit himself to two-dimensional surfaces, but created dynamic, painted installations which surround the viewer. A number of these large scale, three-dimensional installations, wall paintings and video sculptures, and a selection of his paintings from the period 1994-2002 will be seen at Stedelijk Museum CS.


Majerus, who spent his working life primarily between Berlin and Los Angeles, had his breakthrough in the mid 1990s as one of the most striking and talented painters of his generation. The title of the exhibition, "what looks good today may not look good tomorrow", is borrowed from one of his works, and refers to the world of advertising, corporate design, comic strips and computer games, from which he drew considerable inspiration.


Majerus' oeuvre consists of an accumulation of citations, styles and visual motifs, not just from popular culture but also from art history, particularly from Minimal and Pop Art. He made no distinction between "high" and "low"; for him, "Super Mario" and "Toy Story" were just as important as Warhol, Richter, Basquiat and De Kooning. In his eyes all visual media were equal, and should be shown in relationship with each other.


Traditional artistic concepts such as authenticity and originality did little for Majerus. "My work functions precisely around the fact that every claim to "authentic" culture and ways of living is an illusion," he himself once commented with regard to his work, which can be situated in the popular culture of the 1990s.


The exhibition "what looks good today may not look good tomorrow" is Majerus's first retrospective show in The Netherlands, and brings together his most important works, including the early painted installation "gemälde", from 1994 (neugerriemschneider, Berlin), the installation the space is where you'll find it with its monumental computer prints (originally made for Delfina, London, 2000), and the paintings in billboard format he made during his stay in Los Angeles in 2001.


A catalogue has appeared to accompany the exhibition, with texts by Robert Fleck, Veit Loers, Peter Pakesch, Raimar Stange and others (Ger/Eng). Publisher: Verlag der Buchhandlung Walther König, Cologne (312 pp, ISBN: 3-88375-930-9, Stedelijk Museum Catalogue number 883).


Exhibition: 24 June - 16 October 2005
Opening hours: Every day 10 am - 6 pm


Our temporary location Stedelijk Museum CS
is located at the 2nd and 3rd floor of the
Post CS-building (close to Central Station)
Oosterdokskade 5
NL-1011 AD Amsterdam
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Fax +31 (0)20 6752 716
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