Home Artists Kiki Kogelnik

Kooness

Kiki Kogelnik

1935 - 1997
Austria

6 Works exhibited on Kooness

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Works by Kiki Kogelnik

Beach Ball

1978

Prints , Screen Print

91.5 x 66cm

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Venetian Blinds

1980

Prints , Screen Print

94 x 66cm

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Crazy Bird

1978

Prints , Screen Print

86.4 x 66cm

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Smile

1980

Prints , Screen Print

90.2 x 66cm

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Rainy

1977

Prints , Screen Print

73.7 x 53.3cm

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Lady with Hat

1980

Prints , Screen Print

66 x 86.4cm

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Kiki Kogelnik an Austrian by birth and training lived in the United States for many years. She is exhibited widely in Europe and the U.S. Her early work was primarily abstract, but soon evolved into cut out figure forms in space age settings and clothing. These early interests continue to appear in the present figure paintings of women. "Fashion imagery relates directly to our fantasy expectations of the world... expectations which are never met in real life where people are not perfectly attired, posed, cool, aloof and elegant," says Ms. Kogelnik.

Moving to Paris in 1959 and to New York in 1961, she worked in a mode that combined aspects of European figuration and American Pop Art with an increasing feminist consciousness. Sometimes her style mimicked fashion illustration to comment on society's depiction of women. In 1966, Ms. Kogelnik married George Schwarz, a radiation oncologist at St. Vincent's Hospital in Manhattan. He eventually owned several New York restaurants, which she helped design. Among them were today's Elephant and Castle in Greenwich Village, the NoHo Star and the Temple Bar on Lafayette Street, and Keen's Chop House on West 36th Street.

In 1967, Kiki declared that contemporary art comes from the artificial. The human condition has undergone fundamental changes in this century. Traditional values and assumptions have been attacked and upset and not been replaced. Our congenial view of life and security in nature has shattered. The ever-increasing domination of technology and mechanical processes in our civilization have reduced our humanity and alienated us from our natural environment. Hence, the appropriateness of Kiki's feeling that contemporary art comes from the artificial.