Across the wounded universe

Jorn Ebner

5 November – 12 December 2015

Jorn Ebner, ‘Across the wounded universe’, 2015, installation view. Photo: Phillip Wilkinson

Jorn Ebner’s recent work has emerged from his interests in the danse macabre, the mediaeval allegory on death, the literature of American novelist William S Burroughs and French poet Charles Baudelaire, and the songs of John Lennon, whose murder had enormous impact on the artist as a teenager.

After revisiting the biographies of The Beatles for his public art project (The Beatles) in Hamburg (2011-12), Ebner continued reading about, and revisited the music of, John Lennon. The triptych 8 12 1980 (2014) was intended to depict the murder from imagination: a totally distraught woman, a man collapsing from a fatal injury, a building towering over them both.

The smaller Spielmann drawings are taken from portrait photographs in a German Rolling Stone magazine special issue on Lennon. The German ‘Spielmann’ means ‘gleeman’, a mediaeval travelling performer or musician, and in images of the danse macabre, Death is often portrayed as a piper leading the dance. The drawings are intended to create a contemporary dance of death, with the dead musician leading the way.

Jorn Ebner, ‘Across the wounded universe’, 2015, installation view. Photo: Phillip Wilkinson

Jorn Ebner, ‘Across the wounded universe’, 2015, installation view. Photo: Phillip Wilkinson

The new Wounded Galaxy drawing series (2015) is also to be seen in this context, although Ebner here draws on the image of a rose as the subject after reading lines of Baudelaire and Burroughs. The title of the exhibition comes from Across the Wounded Galaxies, the last chapter of Burroughs’ novel The Soft Machine. Ebner merges this with one of his favourite Beatles songs, Across the Universe.


 

Presented as part of ‘drawing?’ an extensive region-wide programme of exhibitions, events and activities which aims to celebrate, explore and consider the role of drawing in art and design, science, technology and everyday life. The programme is a collaboration between several of the North East’s universities, galleries, museums, archives, artist-led groups, artists and makers.

 

Take a video tour of the exhibition


 

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2015Paul Stone