• PRESS
  • Museum
    • History
    • Architecture
    • Publications
    • Team
    • Press
    • Partners
    • Support Associations
    • Art Foundation at Museum Ludwig, Cologne
  • Information for Visitors
    • Opening hours, admission and getting here
    • Special offers for tourists
    • Floorplan
    • Art and museum library
    • Audioguide
    • Newsletter
    • Accessibility
  • Exhibitions
    • Modernist Masterpieces. The Haubrich Collection at Museum Ludwig
    • Gerhard Richter. Elbe, November, and Other Works
    • Saul Steinberg. The Americans
    • Phil Collins. In every dream home a heartache
    • Andrea Fraser. Wolfgang-Hahn-Prize 2013
    • Exhibition preview
    • Archive
  • Collections
    • Expressionism
    • Russian avant-garde
    • Picasso and Cubism
    • Bauhaus and De Stijl
    • Dada and Surrealism
    • Abstract Expressionism
    • Abstraction in Europe
    • Nouveau Réalisme and Fluxus
    • Pop Art
    • Minimal and Conceptual Art
    • Painting Today
    • Sculpture and Installations Today
    • Media Art
    • Graphic Collection
    • The Photographic Collections
  • Programme
    • Calendar
    • Guided Tours
    • Talks and Events
    • Childrens' Programme
    • Workshops for Adults
    • Art in Education
    • Kunst:Dialoge
    • Film Series Before the Law
    • Extended Thursday
    • Filmforum
  • Deutsch
Logo Museum Ludwig

Exhibitions

Sigmar Polke. The Editions

Sigmar Polke, Experiment III, 1999, silkscreen, 70 × 100 cm, © The Estate of Sigmar Polke, Cologne / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2012

Sigmar Polke, Experiment III, 1999, silkscreen, 70 × 100 cm, © The Estate of Sigmar Polke, Cologne / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2012

Sigmar Polke's editions are not something the artist "does on the side". They highlight the reproductive techniques which his paintings also return to time after time: printing, complete with raster dots, photographs and Xeroxes. The editions literally render what the paintings simply translate. But they also translate what the artist himself has painted, or anticipate it. The editions are an important element in Polke's enquiry into the representation and duplication of the world.

Sigmar Polke. The Editions

4.7 – 27.9.2009

Opening hours
Tuesday to Sunday:
10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Every first Thursday of the month 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Closed on Monday

Opening hours, admission

Our exhibition covers the entire history of the editions, right back to over forty years ago. Rare prints and reworkings are as much a part of this as the inserts he put into newspapers in runs of many thousands. Since 1963 and above all after 1967, Polke has produced numbered editions. Back then was the heyday of prints and graphic art, but Polke adopted a highly unusual technique: offset printing. Offset printing, which has only ever interested a handful of artists, is also the medium in which many of Polke's images first originated. Because offset is the medium of the yellow press, whose illustrations Polke has used for his own purposes. So printing the editions took the artist's preoccupation with mass communications back to its very origins.

Sigmar Polke, Television Image (Table Football), 1971, Offset, 64 × 84 cm, © The Estate of Sigmar Polke, Cologne / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2012 Sigmar Polke, Untitled, 1989, silkscreen, 98,2 × 66,9 cm, © The Estate of Sigmar Polke, Cologne / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2012
<p align="left">Sigmar Polke, Cologne Beggar I, 1972, Offset, 43 × 61 cm, © The Estate of Sigmar Polke, Cologne / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2012
<p align="left">Sigmar Polke, Mu nieltnam netorruprup (approx. no taoc nosmirc), 1975, Offset 70 × 50 cm,  © The Estate of Sigmar Polke, Cologne / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2012
Sigmar Polke, 8 Folding Ruler Stars, 1970, Offset 34,4 × 21,8 cm, © The Estate of Sigmar Polke, Cologne / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2012
Sigmar Polke, Iceberg, 2001, silkscreen, exposed film, 68 x 142 cm, © The Estate of Sigmar Polke, Cologne / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2012
Sigmar Polke, DR PABSCHT HET Z'SCHPIEZ<br />S'SCHPÄCKBSCHTECK Z'SCHPÄBSCHTEUT, 1980/91, four colour print, acrylic enamel on vinyl, 50 × 40 cm, © The Estate of Sigmar Polke, Cologne / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2012
Start picture gallery (8 pictures)

But Polke would not be Polke if a great deal didn't happen along the way. Not only does he tear the images out of their original contexts and place them in new company, he manipulates them with every trick in the book. Every conceivable effect is employed - from enlargement and colorizing to smudging, stretching and compressing. Along with every possible technology - from overprinting, punching, and dousing to embossing and spraying. Not to mention every possible material, from gossamer-thin paper to printed cardboard. Since the late sixties, Polke has also enlisted on his own sources; he photographs himself, beggars in Cologne,  buildings in Paris, and much, much more. But the real work often begins in the darkroom, where he can play with exposure times and the enlarger. And these almost magically transformed photographs likewise appear as editions.That Polke crumples photos up and then photographs them again fits into his philosophy, which accords more power to the representation than to what is represented. And yet another technology has proved handy here: Xeroxing. The original can be quickly whisked through, the exposure interrupted or deliberately spoilt. Which results in heads with elongated necks, sloping mountains and wild shadows - a cabinet of deformed curiosities. Scarcely another artist has shown such zest in experimenting with printing, and scarcely another has proved to be as funny as Sigmar Polke.
Thanks to a generous donation by the husband and wife collectors Anna Friebe-Reininghaus and Ulrich Reininghaus, Museum Ludwig is now in the position to present all the richness of this oeuvre, created by one of the most important and innovative artists of our times.

Curator: Dr. Julia Friedrich


Public tours (in German) take place every sunday at 4 pm.

Audio guide

An audio guide is available in German and English for 3 € (plus € 20 deposit) at the information desk.

Publication

New acquisitions presented in the series „Grafische Sammlung /Museum Ludwig", issue 7, Sigmar Polke.

 


Additional current Exhibitions

  • Modernist Masterpieces. The Haubrich Collection at Museum Ludwig
  • Gerhard Richter. Elbe, November, and Other Works
  • Saul Steinberg. The Americans
  • Phil Collins. In every dream home a heartache
  • Andrea Fraser. Wolfgang-Hahn-Prize 2013

Exhibition preview

  • Kathryn Andrews. Special Meat Occasional Drink
  • Jo Baer

© Museum Ludwig 2013 Imprint
a museum of the city of cologne