
Carla Klein portrays spaces and areas without humans. In her often large oil paintings, she explores and distorts our perception of reality. In Close Distance, KM21 presents new and recent work by Carla Klein in her first solo exhibition in a Dutch museum.
As a starting point for her canvases, Carla Klein uses photos she takes during her travels. While she previously based her work on unique analog photos, her new paintings depart from easily reproducible prints. It is not the image itself, but the actual print that forms the basis of the final work. Stains, fading ink, or unsuitable print paper – all of these technical traces are incorporated by Klein in her manual translation to paint. Thus, the mechanical and the human come together in each painting.
Klein always searches for a certain emptiness, an anonymous and timeless space that cannot be specifically traced. She is drawn to the abstraction of a landscape. From vague in-between spaces like airports and empty highways to desolate desert areas. She is intrigued by the way a place can seem both flat and deep at the same time. When everyday life came to a standstill in recent years, Klein also turned her attention to the quiet environment around her home and studio. This blurs the line between the outside and inside world.
From reality to photo to painting: the layered landscapes are not immediately comprehensible. Yet they manage to completely envelop the viewer. Balancing between the tangibility of paint and the illusion of the image, Carla Klein plays with representing reality.
www.ftn-books.com has several publications on Carla Klein
