MAY THE FLOWERS REMIND US WHY THE RAIN WAS NECESSARY
solo show by
Lucille Guder
Summer 2022 at Kaffeemitte
"Flowers and women are my favorite motifs - there is nothing I like to paint better. For me it's important that my art has a positive influence on people - first of all on myself, when I work on the painting. Maybe that's my French side: I appreciate the pleasant things in life.
And if I also create a good feeling in the person looking at my painting, then I have achieved my goal as an artist.
And beautiful flowers make almost everyone happy - no wonder: they stand for spring, for the beauty of nature, for the emergence of new life and for seduction and love.
Like a florist, I stood in front of my painted flowers and could now decide how I wanted to combine them. Like someone who puts together a very individual bouquet, it was my pleasant task to put together paintings for the exhibition "May the flowers remind us why the rain was necessary".
In addition to the two large, prominent works that I pasted directly on the wall, I chose works that are each dedicated to a special woman - a woman who inspires me because she looks great but also because she brings a quality that makes this bouquet a good overall composition.
Flowers are so different, no two are alike and each one is beautifully unique. Women are just as beautiful, but of course even more complex. To their character belongs a personality, a story - a human life.
So for me, painting not only means that I can deal with beautiful and lovely things, I can also point to things that are important to me. And so there is a little story behind each of my paintings. About a special person, about an idea that I think is important or about something that I have experienced myself and that I would like to tell you about.
This is my bouquet for you!"
Aline
Dakar, Senegal / May 2021 / Collage on canvas
"This work is dedicated to Senegalese freedom fighter Aline Sitoe Diatta. She is a symbol of resistance against social injustice - a fighter for women's rights and against the oppression of Senegal by the French colonial forces.
By painting her, I want to make sure that people remember her and her courage.
Aline Sitoe Diatta was born 1920, as a black woman, in an oppressed land and in a time when women could only rarely become politically activists - and if they did, then only at a very high price. Aline Sitoe Diatta had chosen civil disobedience, but as leader of the tax-resistance-movement she had powerful opponents: The European colonialists and the patriarchy. And indeed, Aline Sitoe Diatta died, far too young, in a prison, age 24!
Besides the fact that I greatly admire this woman, I am left with the gratitude that I live in a world where my moral strength and courage are not so severely tested - from my relatively easy situation I want my art to address issues that are important to me. In this case, I want to remind people how fearless Aline Sitoe Diatta was: A true feminist rebel!"
Aida
Berlin / February 2022 / Collage and acrylic on paper
"During my stay in Senegal, I've noticed wax fabrics that are produced there and that often show floral patterns. This is where the hibiscus blossoms come from that you see in the background of my collage. In the foreground is Aida, a lady who sells these fabrics in Dakar. She told me that hibiscus flowers are used for weddings in Senegal - at first, I liked that a lot - I had a positive idea of weddings and loved the patterns. But Aida told me about a rather unromantic and painful reality. Aida and many other women in West Africa have to tolerate their husbands marrying a second or third wife. The women suddenly find themselves competing with each other involuntarily, and the "first" wives have no right to object to this.
Aida told me how hard it was for her when a second woman moved in. The husband would no longer be able to take care of her and their children properly. Her home was suddenly downsized. Aida and many other feminists in Senegal are demanding that the respective laws be changed. Aida is not against polygamy in principle, the problem is that only men are allowed to marry more often. If she wanted to have a second husband - she would not be allowed. But Aida said she would definitely not want that - one could see it in the men, who usually do not find happiness either. Often the women within the family become allies, and with each new woman who moves in, life becomes more complicated.
According to a patriarchal law, the bride and groom should decide whether they want to live monogamously or polygamously - once made, the decision cannot be reversed. Yet many couples would have preferred a divorce - such a family is not only financially but also emotionally demanding. They live under one roof with a person with whom harmonious co-existence is practically impossible. Often sharing the household with more than 10 children. Aida has expressed clear opposition to legal polygyny in Senegal. These laws are first of all a discrimination of women - but in the end a huge disadvantage for the entire society."
Madame Fleurs
Berlin / September 2021 / Collage on paper
“A woman in a bikini, with a huge bouquet of flowers - that could be me, in front of Madame Fleurs in Schönfließer Strasse - on a hot summer day. Sometimes I buy dried flowers for my collages - but I prefer living plants in pots or as seeds. They all grow in our apartment, there are over 50 of them and everyone is different. Next to my art, the plants are my favourite thing to do, it feels good when I can be with them.
Through the time spent with the plants, I also see people differently. There are so many similarities - it's the cycle from seed to flower to fruit and back to the seed. Some plants need a little stick until they have a strong trunk and can stand on their own. Other plants just won't grow until you put them in a different spot or bring another plant near them - it's a delicate web of different demands and concepts of life. Often it seems to be more about a mood, a vibe. Not so much about an objective amount of sunlight or water. I am not surprised when I hear that there are plant lovers who talk to their plants!
It has been good for me, too, to move to a new place. I moved from Paris to Berlin and found a new home. Paris is a wonderful city, with good weather and good wine. But Paris is also a very crowded city, with little open space - but I needed that space, so I happily put down roots here - alongside my 50 plants.”
Madame Fleurs / 2
Berlin / September 2021 / Collage on paper
"This is the second work dedicated to my friend Anna, whom I admire very much and to whom I owe a lot. Anna is from France too and she had the courage to open a naturally dried flower store here in Berlin, called Madame Fleurs. In Paris such stores are quite common - but in Germany, people are more used to fresh-cut flowers.
When I got a big box of leftovers from Anna's production as a gift, I started to glue and scan these dried flowers on my paintings. I learned, that not all types of flowers are good for making dried flowers out of them - but if you do it right, drying brings out the beauty and complexity of a plant all over again. I like to make miniature bouquets from these flowers and plant parts and paint a lady behind them to match the bouquet.
And I like working with these flowers because it gives new use to the small off-cuts that would have otherwise ended up in the trash. Overall, dried flowers are much more sustainable than fresh flowers - they will remain beautiful for a very long time and do not have to be thrown away after a few days.
The gift I received from Anna inspired my art - but so did her courage to try something new. Her example has reinforced me to consistently follow my path as an artist. To give up my old office job. To put all on one card."
You Are Gold
Berlin / October 2021 / Acrylic on paper
"For this work I used the smallest brush I have. I started with a small, golden dot and put on a new podcast series. It's the feminist podcast 'Un podcast à soi' by @arteradio about special women around the world. Once again, I was amazed at how strong women can be when they support each other. The first episode was about a female prison guard who collected books in her free time to give to inmates. It was discussed how women who have been in prison have a much harder time getting back on their feet than men - this is due to patriarchal structures and stereotyping in society. For example, women in prison get fewer visitors than male inmates - the women are more likely to be left by their partners. Children are sent to foster care or to new families, while children can usually stay with their mothers when their fathers are incarcerated. And it's considered a bigger stigma - a woman is arguably blamed more harshly if she served time in prison. That's unfair, and the prison guard wanted to do something about that and organized herself with other women. This lady deserves a gold medal. The first small dot is dedicated to her. I then continued to put golden dots next to each other and painted little medals for 20 hours. This painting is my homage to the many heroines in the world, I want to tell them: You are gold!"
Lizzo
Berlin / February 2022 / Collage on Paper
"This picture is dedicated to the musician Lizzo. The flower petals for her crown are called Bougainvillea and hand-picked. I dried them in a book and combined them with flowers from Madame Fleurs. Lizzo's music, in all honesty, is not necessarily my favorite. But still, I'm a big fan! Lizzo is very active on social media and expresses herself on various relevant topics. Her advocacy for acceptance of overweight people is courageous and she counters criticism with a lot of self-confidence. She shows how to stand up for yourself and how to fight back against insults with humor and intelligence. I like that message.
So more than Lizzo's art, I admire her as an artist. The image she communicates of herself and her comments perhaps have more positive effects than her music. She is creative not only as a musician, but in all kinds of life issues. I find this self-image very inspiring and encouraging - for my own path as an artist. The engagement with art, the process, the constant research - that is at least as important as the piece of art itself, I believe. Nevertheless, I certainly hope that Lizzo - should she see it - would like my collage."
Sensual Flower
Berlin / May 2020 / Acrylic on Paper
"This is one of the first flower-women paintings I ever did. It was the last day before all stores closed for Corona lock-down and I just realized I needed to prepare for the days ahead. So I ran to an art store and bought paper, brushes and paint. Then I had a lot of time and I started painting - and thinking. That was when I realized that I would like to devote myself to art full time. I used to work with digital marketing, so I knew I would have to promote my art well if I wanted to make a living from it. So I built a website and started offering my work online - later also at art markets and events. The subject was also obvious to me: flowers. I've always loved to wear clothes with floral patterns and have surrounded myself with plants - in the parks of Paris and Berlin or with the ones in my own apartment.
That's how this self-portrait came about, a woman who has an idea - a new plan is about to blossom.
Soon I realized how good it does me to paint or paste collages. Sensual, feminine shapes and colors - they brighten my senses. The meditative, creative process does my health a lot of good. Art has a healing effect, I thought so before - and I found the confirmation during the Corona months, when I declared myself an artist."
Blooming
Berlin / May 2020 / Acrylic on paper
"Blooming was made two years ago, when my best friend was expecting her first child - it is dedicated to her and her baby. The work will always remind me of this time and the special glow in which my friend was shining.
I have shown the motive in all my exhibitions so far, and have printed it in many different formats. For my exhibition at Kaffeemitte, I wanted to try something new: With the help of street artist Dared, I enlarged the motive so that it fills an entire wall. I projected the drawing onto a large paper, transferred the lines and then colored and cut it out. Then I glued it up with brush and wallpaper paste. I am really happy how the drawing blends with the space.
Sometimes you hear that only galleries or museums are the right place to present art appropriately. But we can reach hundreds of people in a place like Kaffeemitte. Seven days a week. An audience sees my work, that has not deliberately come to see art. An audience I wouldn't have reached otherwise. That's the attraction of street art as Dared creates it. Large images pasted in public space, seen by everyone who walks by.
Part of the challenge is using the most durable glue - I was still having my difficulties with the dosage, so the day after the opening of the show I was back at Kaffeemitte. My paste-up was coming loose and I wanted to fix it. When I got there, there was a stroller in front of the wall and I waited without hurry until the mom had gotten her coffee. Meanwhile, I thought again of the time when this work was created, and my friend and her daughter Eva, who has since started to play with brush and paint herself."
Booty Bouquet
Berlin / April 2021 / Dry flower collage and acrylic on paper
"This picture is inspired by a vase - my favorite vase, which I bought from a friend who started her own business at the same time as me. Of course, it mostly holds dried flowers, which I enjoy even more than fresh flowers. The reason I like the vase so much is because it is shaped like a very voluminous female hip. I like feminine shapes and I like that there are many objects now, in design and art, that play with these shapes. Sexual, feminine symbolism is popular and I'm happy about that - I like it from an aesthetic point of view, but also because it increases acceptance and therefore freedom for women. Art can create images, ideas and standards, visions for a new world.
That's why it's good to see classic beauty concepts being changed. Because everybody is different - perfection does not exist. That's why I love to work with dried flowers. They are parts of plants that I get as gift because they are too small or already a bit broken and can't be sold. These flowers are just as outside a norm, as the huge ceramic booty that I use as a vase."
Culottée
Berlin / April 2021 / Acrylic on paper
"Augustin, a friend from Paris has written a poem and this painting is dedicated to him and his wonderful craft. He describes very sensually how a woman, perhaps on a hot summer day, lies in her bed. She wears only delicate underwear and she is full of romantic desire. The poem is clearly "culottée" - that is, a bit cheeky and perhaps typically French.
Of course, I have already tried to translate the poem for my friends, but I have not succeeded. Not in English and certainly not in German. Although I live in Berlin for six years, I hardly speak German. Here in Berlin, all our friends speak English, it's a group of many nationalities. We expats develop a language all our own that way - more people are using English these days who don't speak it as native speakers than those who have only learned it over the years. The result is no longer any official national language - but it is very practical. The downside is that subtle poems in a foreign language cannot be appreciated. Like Culottée, which is full of nuances in the language - it is worth learning French for it. I liked the poem so much that I wanted to make a painting out of it. So I placed individual sentences from it along a woman's back and imagined what "Culotte" she might be wearing - that is, what panties. I hope I've captured at least a small part of the poem.
But read for yourself:
PETITE CULOTTE
Ribambelle de dentelle
à fleur de peau
la floraison
en soie
sur ta peau fine
et soyeuse
qu'effleure
la saison
riante
et florissante
du désir.
PS: Thanks to Dared for helping glue up this big paste-up for the exhibition at Kaffeemitte."
Golden Pussy
Berlin / December 2020 / Collage and Acrylic on paper
"This work wants to catch the attention. I used dry flowers and small golden dots to draw a pussy on colored paper - hoping that it not only looks nice but also promotes an idea. The painting is dedicated to a friend of mine who works for the NGO Terre-des-Femmes. It is my gift to her and at the same time advertising her important work. Terre-des-Femmes have been campaigning for an equal and self-determined life for girls and women worldwide for 40 years. They carry out campaigns, and public relations work, promote projects and help with international networking.
Their motto is: Equal, self-determined and free.
One of the serious crimes my friend is working against is female genital mutilation. Women who have been circumcised can no longer enjoy sex. They can't commit sin anymore - an unrepairable obligation to chastity. The origin is probably the jealousy of the men. A patriarchal power fantasy that camouflages itself with religion and morality. I think we cannot achieve a peaceful and fair world, as long as such misogynistic practices exist. Therefore, it is a strong motivator for me as an artist to name this injustice. In my toolbox, I have motifs and colours that point the viewer to something - in this case to the existence of the NGO Terre-des-Femmes and their work.
A pussy on a large pink paper. Delicate as a flower, no one should hurt it!"
Effeuillage
Berlin / February 2022 / Dry Flower collage and acrylic on paper
"This image is inspired by a dancer at the Moulin Rouge in Paris - a place that is part of my identity as a French woman. The dancer was wearing stockings, which I replaced with flowers in my painting. The French word effeuillage is ambiguous, it has two meanings. A plant can lose petals as a person can undress - both can be very sensual. But not only the name of the art work is somewhat provocative for some Germans. Effeuillage can be pronounced correctly only by the most practised francophiles, I have noticed.
And I've also noticed that people in France think differently about the Moulin Rouge than people in Germany. Or about the concept or the stereotype behind it. Women undressing in front of an audience is not a classic symbol of feminism in Germany. On the contrary. And there is some truth to the criticism. Because places like the Moulin Rouge have a dark, misogynistic history. But I try not to fall into stereotypes. Because nowadays the performers at Moulin Rouge are celebrated stars, they wear crazy clothes and seem to enjoy life. Things are never black and white - but colourful and full of facets. In Berlin, most clichés are fortunately invalid. And if cliché, it's in a fun way. The style and the motives of the Moulin Rouge have become icons that inspire artists all over. It reminds me of Paris when I see popular burlesque shows like The Teaserettes - and the cheeky photographs by my friend Zora Jurenkova, which I warmly recommend to you."
MAY THE FLOWERS REMIND US WHY THE RAIN WAS NECESSARY
Lucille Guder
At Kaffeemitte: April - June 2022
We do Art Blog / Gregor Hutz / 2022