
The Tyrolean artist Heinz Gappmayr, who was born in 1925 and passed away in 2010 in Innsbruck, Austria, utilized language as the main medium in his artistic creations. In doing so, he deconstructed the fundamental elements of our language – words, letters, numbers, and punctuation marks – and revealed their underlying essence as coded graphic forms by isolating them from their usual “context” and presenting them in a visual, syntactical order in his graphic works, wall works, and installations. This process of extraction, dismantling, and variation of individual words and sentence components followed not only aesthetic principles, but also a well-thought-out philosophical concept. Gappmayr’s works offer us the opportunity to engage as observers in a new and unbiased way of contemplating the symbolic meaning of the words we use on a daily basis without pondering the relationship between the signifier and the signified.
This is particularly intriguing when considering words that lack a physical, tangible referent and instead represent something intangible. Thus, it is not surprising that words such as “wind,” “light,” “time,” and “now” are prevalent throughout Gappmayr’s extensive body of work. In fact, in the portfolio of screen prints belonging to the collection of the Museum Haus Konstruktiv, the adjectives “weiss” (white) and “sichtbar” (visible) are depicted in every conceivable visual permutation. The concepts they convey can be grasped through (mental) images that approach a conceptual reality.
Gappmayr’s exploration of the referential aspect of language, starting from the early 1960s, exhibits a certain correlation with structuralism and semiotics. In the field of art history, his pieces are commonly categorized as Concrete or visual poetry, although this is not entirely accurate, as Gappmayr himself deemed the term “poetry” as “archaic” or outdated. Nonetheless, there is a resemblance to Concrete Art in his endeavors to materialize non-visual scenarios – a subject that also piqued Max Bill’s interest. His art also shares certain traits with Conceptual Art, akin to that of Lawrence Weiner and Joseph Kosuth. In the end, it was the distinctiveness of Gappmayr’s stance that propelled him to be the focal point of numerous exhibitions in Austria and globally, while also serving as inspiration for a considerable amount of literature about his oeuvre.
www.ftn-books.com has 2 original Gappmayr prints for sale.









































































