Katinka Lampe, 6075218, 2018-2021, Oil on linen, 23 1/2 x 29 1/2 inches. Courtesy of the artist and Elizabeth Houston Gallery
Katinka Lampe, 5060217, 2021, Oil on linen, 23 1/2 x 19 5/8 inches. Courtesy of the artist and Elizabeth Houston Gallery
Katinka Lampe, 5065202, 2020, Oil on linen, 19 5/8 x 25 1/2 inches. Courtesy of the artist and Elizabeth Houston Gallery
Katinka Lampe, 6580215, 2021, Oil on linen, 25 1/2 x 31 3/8 inches. Courtesy of the artist and Elizabeth Houston Gallery
Katinka Lampe, 4055213, 2021, Oil on linen, 15 5/8 x 21 5/8 inches. Courtesy of the artist and Elizabeth Houston Gallery
Elizabeth Houston Gallery presents Katinka Lampe: Bubble from September 15, 2021 until October 30, 2021.
Katinka Lampe has long shaped her portraits in the interstices between figuration and abstraction. Bypassing depiction, Lampe imbues her work with hints of broader societal motifs, leaving subtle signs for the viewer to follow into a deeper look. Her most recent series Bubble, on view at Elizabeth Houston Gallery from September 15 to October 30, 2021, is a true sign of the times.
Made in 2020, Lampe’s paintings echo with concerns and considerations endemic to the year of their production. Working in confinement during a global pandemic, her private experiences had become universal ones, but in the most unusual of ways. Quarantine had thrust so many into private worlds of their own, the world over. The space of the home suddenly became the bubble separating us from others, and from other viewpoints. Like internet activist Eli Pariser’s concept of the “filter bubble,” our individual informational spheres carved out by invisible algorithmic editing of the web, the “home bubble” had narrowed our experiences to the familiar. But for Lampe, reworking the stillness of that space into a creative focus had become her novel distraction from the otherwise unchanging progression of days.
Her paintings are portraits of the solitude of 2020. In each, we are at pains to say where her depiction ends and impressions begin. Veiling her models, Lampe obscures their faces, revealing only a sliver of a profile turned away from the viewer in some instances. Colored layers that bisect her portraits and cut her canvases into sections preclude any overly literal associations. Other faces press against the edges of the frame, refusing eye contact, or hide themselves from our gaze behind their hands, blankets, or clothing. One wears a balaclava.
Lampe’s work is more a study of alienation and silence than it is a representation of others. In keeping with that emotional undercurrent, she has restrained her palette. In muted gray tones or pitch black, Lampe explores the absence of light falling on features. She has honed in on the details in this series, and yet her portraits are not of anyone or even anything in particular. One imagines that some of her figures might be found lingering in the background of old master paintings. There is no one taking center stage here. The bubble itself makes an appearance, metaphorically, of course, and literally, too, in the form of chewing gum. A rosy pink orb conceals her models’ faces. Casting their glances downward toward it, they look more bored than satisfied, more absent than present.
In Bubble, Lampe has painted her experience of the pandemic, oscillating between seeking and denying, between presence and absence. And yet, as is her custom, she has removed herself as much as possible from her work. This series is unique in that we—in our separate but similar bubbles—are there in the paintings, and removed from them, too.
– Robyn Day
Robyn Day is a Chicago-based photographer and freelance writer for Photograph Magazine. She previously wrote art criticism for WBUR, Boston’s NPR news station, and Art New England
Katinka Lampe is an artist based out of The Netherlands. She received her degree from the Academy of Art and Design in Hertogenbosch, Netherlands. Her work has been widely exhibited internationally in a variety of galleries, museums, and prominent art fairs such as Museum Van Loon, Amsterdam Netherlands; Arnhems Museum, Arnhem, the Netherlands; Arco, Madrid, Spain; FIAC Paris, France; Untitled Miami Beach and Untitled San Francisco. Her work is included in the collections of Museum 21C, United States; West Sun Capital Collection, Montreal, Canada; APMA, AmorePacific Museum of Art Seoul, Korea; Salon Dahlmann, Berlin; C.N.A.P Centre National des Arts Plastique, Paris, France; Art Curial, Paris, France; Frisseras Museum Athens, Greece. In The Netherlands: AKZONobel Art Foundation, Amsterdam; Museum Arnhem, Arnhem; ASR Collections, Utrecht; ING Collection, Amsterdam; Museum van Loon, Amsterdam; Museum More, Gorssel; Schunck*, Heerlen; De Nederlandsche Bank, Amsterdam; Menzis Art collection, Wageningen; AEGON Art collection, The Hague; Achmea Art collection, Leiden; APG Pensioenfonds, Amsterdam; Bouwfonds, Hoevelaken; Collection De Heus, Barneveld; Collection Van Dam, Wassenaar; Hugo Carla Brown Collection, The Hague; collection Sanders, Aerdenhout; Collection Princen, Rotterdam; and Powerhouse-Company, Rotterdam. Lampe’s work has been featured in various international newspapers and numerous publications including ArtTravel Magazine, Art-Es, ELLE Décor, and Public Art Magazine, among others.