Installation view of Street Turns River at Josh Lilley, presenting Christof Mascher
Installation view of Street Turns River at Josh Lilley, presenting Christof Mascher
Installation view of Street Turns River at Josh Lilley, presenting Christof Mascher
Installation view of Street Turns River at Josh Lilley, presenting Christof Mascher
Installation view of Street Turns River at Josh Lilley, presenting Christof Mascher
Installation view of Street Turns River at Josh Lilley, presenting Christof Mascher
Installation view of Street Turns River at Josh Lilley, presenting Christof Mascher
Installation view of Street Turns River at Josh Lilley, presenting Christof Mascher

Artworks

Walden by Christof Mascher, 2015
North Bend by Christof Mascher, 2015
Street turns river by Christof Mascher, 2015
Loom by Christof Mascher, 2015
Dino rug by Christof Mascher, 2015
Douglas fir by Christof Mascher, 2015
Westbound, by Christof Mascher, 2015
Introverted-lambdog-ant-eater by Christof Mascher, 2015
Northern light by Christof Mascher, 2015
Night by Christof Mascher, 2015
Friends by Christof Mascher, 2015
Pinup II by Christof Mascher, 2015
Fire walk with me by Christof Mascher, 2015
Pool I by Christof Mascher, 2015
Pinup III by Christof Mascher, 2015
You know, this is — excuse me — a damn fine cup of coffee! by Christof Mascher, 2015
Yes by Christof Mascher, 2015
Night Is Lovers by Christof Mascher, 2015
House of many windows by Christof Mascher, 2015

Christof Mascher

Street Turns River

20 November 2015 – 14 January 2016

It was fun to make huge paintings in the middle of the night on subway cars, and the feeling of driving past my works the next day still has no equivalent. Adrenaline, the sensation of being fully awake, allows complete focus on an activity. I consider drawing and painting as a way to think, and the content in my work has for a long time been a vessel, a means to use colors, layers and shapes with total certainty in a narrative way.

An idea or a found image appears as a starting point but I never really know what happens after that. The mind speaks and sings, and all I want to do is compose, combining patterns, ornaments and objects in new relations. Mood or flow makes it possible for me to reach the content I want. Its not mania so much as trance, a channeling. No expectations need be fulfilled, though I am constantly searching for beauty. Beauty is a hidden villa, abandoned for 100 years and accidently rediscovered. Beauty is a small pond in a forest, a canoe trip at four in the morning on a river in northern Sweden.

I cannot plan, and there are countless ways to reach a result. In Pinup III, for example, I used pure color pigments for the first time, pouring them on a board primed with a medium that makes them dry immediately on the surface. Before then, it took weeks to dry. The watercolor works are stretched on board with paper glue so that they can sustain litres of water without rippling. It is an amazing experience to wake up and see what has happened to a paper work overnight. Indian ink with a little shellac finish and pigment-heavy crayons have their own language.

My figurative elements are slowly fading into a rug of short stories fusing past and future. Sometimes a memory appears in bright detail, as when a friend tagged a mirrored surface only for that surface to open and reveal itself as a subway security room. He was yanked through. This happens.

Christof Mascher (b. 1979, Hannover, Germany) lives and works in Germany. Mascher has presented two prior solo exhibitions at Josh Lilley alongside solo institutional exhibitions at the Städtische Galerie Wolfsburg, Germany; California Lutheran University, USA; and Kunsthalle Emden, Germany.