Rijksmuseum opens '12x Erwin Olaf' & Erwin Olaf is named Knight in the Order of the Netherlands Lion

3 July - 22 September 2019

 

The Rijksmuseum has been a major source of inspiration for Erwin Olaf since his early youth, with Rembrandt, Jan Steen, Breitner and other Dutch artists being hugely influential on his work. To mark the transfer of his core collection the Rijksmuseum is staging the exhibition 12 x Erwin Olaf, in which Olaf places his photographs in dialogue with Dutch painting. This is the first time that his work will be displayed alongside that of his great examples.

 

Core collection

This exhibition is being held to mark the transfer of Erwin Olaf’s core collection. Last year the museum received almost 500 objects from the artist, including prints, portfolios, videos, magazines, books and posters. The vast majority were gifted by the artist, and some were acquired thanks to BankGiro Lottery players.

 

60th birthday and Knight in the Order of the Netherlands Lion.

The opening celebrations took place on 2 July, the artist’s 60th birthday, when Olaf was named Knight in the Order of the Netherlands Lion, a Dutch order of chivalry awarded to those with merits of a very exceptional nature for society. The photographer was distinguished in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam for his leading photos and his commitment to the LGBT community, according to the municipality of Amsterdam.

 

Olaf said, "It fills me with pride that on my 60th birthday I will be surrounded by an abundance of the beauty that has inspired me since my earliest youth. This is the root of my artistic expression."

 

Combinations

Working in collaboration with the Rijksmuseum’s director Taco Dibbits, Erwin Olaf has selected eleven photographs and one video installation for display alongside eleven paintings and one print from the Rijksmuseum collection. Their combined presentation bears witness to Olaf’s effortless ability to bridge past and present. All artists face the same challenges and use the same instruments: light, expression, texture. I recognise myself in these paintings; the inner need for self-expression, says Olaf, I find this exploration of the interior the toughest of all, but also the most enjoyable.

 

Portrait of a Girl Dressed in Blue by Johannes Cornelisz Verspronck, for example, will be coupled with Erwin Olaf’s Hope – Portrait 5. The photographer chose Verspronck’s painting for a variety of reasons. The girl looks directly at the viewer. Her eyes may be composed of just a few strokes of paint, but as a viewer you feel like you are looking right into them – the painter’s rendering of the light in her eyes is utterly compelling. Olaf was also very affected by the texture of the fabric in this painting. There are striking correspondences between the two works: the blue and yellow dresses; the girl and the young woman. What is more, in their essence the compositions are fairly simple, with little of note to be seen apart from the subjects themselves. Without prompting, the model in Olaf’s photograph made precisely the right gesture: the hand seeking support from the wall. Such moments cannot be planned. Olaf regards this photograph and Verspronck’s painting as the results of a synergy between artist and model.

 

The print Nude Woman by Rembrandt will hang alongside Erin Olaf’s 1987 photograph La Penseuse (Squares). At the core of print and photograph alike is the depiction of the subject’s skin, which in both cases is finely rendered. Like Rembrandt, Olaf made the conscious choice to portray an imperfect body. To the artist, this model’s skin is far more interesting than that of a young, unblemished and perfectly proportioned body that is not yet in decline; that has not yet lived a life.

 

www.rijksmuseum.com/erwinolaf

 

www.tellereport.com/erwinolafknighted