Rohini Devasher is Deutsche Bank’s “Artist of the Year” for 2024
Deutsche Bank recognizes Rohini Devasher as the "Artist of the Year" for 2024. Born in 1978, the Indian artist studied painting and graphic art and currently resides in Delhi. In her intricate artistic endeavors, she delves into the intersections of science, art, and philosophy. For the inaugural occasion, Stephanie Rosenthal, an esteemed art expert and Director of the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi Project, suggested three artists, among whom Rohini Devasher was chosen by the bank.
The “Artist of the Year” award focuses on promising artists who have already produced artistically and socially significant works that align with the two focal points of the Deutsche Bank Collection: works on paper and photography. Starting from 2024, the conventional three-member jury of international curators has been replaced. Instead, a single distinguished personality from the global art world now nominates artists for the award.
Stephanie Rosenthal, the Director of the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi Project, served until 2022 as the head of the Gropius Bau in Berlin. Before this role, she held prominent curatorial positions at the Hayward Gallery in London and the Haus der Kunst in Munich. In 2016, she assumed the role of Artistic Director for the 20th Biennale of Sydney, and in 2019, she chaired the jury for the 58th International Art Exhibition of the Venice Biennale.
More information on the exhibition at Palais Populaire: Rohini Devasher: Borrowed Light – PalaisPopulaire
Show content of Artistic positions with a research-based approach
Rohini Devasher often collaborates with researchers, amateur astronomers, and global scientific institutions such as the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science (MPIWG) and CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research. Through these collaborations, Devasher intertwines scientific experiments and research on the physical phenomena of perception with her own artistic materials, resulting in captivating installations.
“Rohini Devasher is the first Indian artist to be honored by Deutsche Bank as the ‘Artist of the Year,’ marking a groundbreaking convergence of art and science,” says Britta Färber, responsible for art and culture at Deutsche Bank. “I extend my gratitude to Stephanie Rosenthal; in an era of ecological and humanitarian crises, she has put forward an artist who, in a poetic yet factual manner, compels us to reconsider existing perceptions of the world and our place in it.”
“Rohini Devasher utilizes a research-based approach to intricate complex narratives that address the pressing issues of our daily lives," remarked Stephanie Rosenthal. “Through the medium of drawing, she delves into societal structures and cultural dynamics, providing the viewer with a purposeful and contemplative space amidst the digital cacophony.”
Show content of The ambiguity of observation
Her most recent 4-channel film, "One Hundred Thousand Suns" (2023), stands as an exemplary piece of work. Spanning material, ephemeral, personal, and historical dimensions, the work references over 100,000 portraits of the sun captured for over a century at the Kodaikanal Solar Observatory in India. Through a rich blend of the observatory’s archival material, NASA public-domain images, and her own data collections, Devasher invites us into a closer encounter with the Sun. In this exploration, she unravels the complexities and ambiguities of observation, challenging the perception of data as seemingly detached, disinterested or neutral.
"One Hundred Thousand Suns" can be seen until March 24 at the Minnesota Street Project in San Francisco. Additionally, it can be experienced until June 2, 2024, as part of the group exhibition “The Creation of Science” at the Museum Catherijneconvent in Utrecht, and until April 14, as part of the exhibition “Punya 2.0” at the Kunsthalle Bern. From early April onward, the film will be shown at the Dr. Bhau Daji Lad Museum in Mumbai.
The “Artist of the Year” award focuses on promising artists who have already produced artistically and socially significant works that align with the two focal points of the Deutsche Bank Collection: works on paper and photography. Starting from 2024, the conventional three-member jury of international curators has been replaced. Instead, a single distinguished personality from the global art world now nominates artists for the award every two years.
„Artists of the Year“ of the previous years
La Chola Poblete 2023
La Chola Poblete has been named Deutsche Bank's “Artist of the Year” for 2023. Born in 1989 in Mendoza (Argentina), she is the fourteenth artist honored by the bank. The Argentinian critically examines the consequences of colonialism and white supremacy in her home country. In paintings, watercolors, sculptures, and performances, she reflects on her indigenous and queer roots and opposes the stereotyping and exoticization of indigenous peoples. As part of the award, La Chola Poblete will present her first solo exhibition in Europe at Berlin’s PalaisPopulaire in the fall of 2023.
LuYang 2022
Born in Shanghai, LuYang is one of the most important contemporary Asian artists and this year’s Deutsche Bank “Artist of the Year.” LuYang belongs to a young art scene in China inspired by science fiction, manga, gaming, and techno culture that works with hypermodern technologies and deals with the ideas of posthumanism or transhumanism. These schools of thought explore how to extend the limits of human possibilities through the use of high-tech. What is extraordinary about LuYang’s work is that the posthuman is put in the context of Buddhist and Hindu cosmologies.
LuYang studied at the China Academy of Arts in Hangzhou and lives and works in Shanghai. Since 2015, LuYang has been involved in numerous group exhibitions worldwide, currently at The Milk of Dreams, 59th Venice Biennale. The artist has had solo exhibitions in Beijing, Moscow, and most recently Aarhus and Erlangen, and as of end of September at the Zabludowicz Collection. 2019 awardee of the BMW Art Journey.
Maxwell Alexandre 2021
30-year-old Maxwell Alexandre was born in Rocinha, Rio de Janeiro’s largest favela, where he still lives and works today. His paintings, performances, and installations are inspired by everyday life in Rocinha, revolving around racism and police violence, community and spirituality. References to icons of black culture such as Jean-Michel Basquiat, Nina Simone, and James Brown appear again and again in his work. At the same time, Alexandre’s artistic practice is strongly influenced by the ideas of the Protestant Church, to which he no longer belongs. Alexandre, who comes from the skater scene, founded together with friends A Noiva, a kind of artists’ church which releases its own records, regards works of art as prayers, and views the studio as a temple. He is already a star in Brazil.
Conny Maier 2021
Berlin-born Conny Maier, who works in her hometown and in Baleal, Portugal, is also a phenomenon. Over the last few years, the trained fashion designer, who founded a fashion label, has caused a sensation as a painter. The circular mouths of her figures, which make them seem to cry, have become a kind of trademark. Maier’s paintings combine neo-expressive expression with a strong sense of color and composition. Her impressive work cycles focus on the existential interrelation between man and nature personified in a variety of animals.
Zhang Xu Zhan 2021
Zhang Xu Zhan was born in 1988 as the son of a family that has been trading for centuries in traditional paper figures used in Taiwan for ritual ceremonies or funerals. He continues this tradition in his animated films, sculptures, and video installations. Zhang Xu Zhan has built models of luxury houses and gigantic paper dolls. His main works include his stop-motion films, for which he makes filigree figures and landscapes out of papier-mâché. In them, Zhang Xu Zhan creates a fantastic cosmos populated by mythical creatures, singing animals and plants, and nature spirits, and dominated by ancient rituals—a world that is at once apocalyptic and fairytale-like.
Caline Aoun 2018
Born in Beirut in 1983, Aoun is one of a generation of young Lebanese artists who grew up abroad after civil war broke out in 1975 and completed their artistic training outside the country. She studied in London at Central Saint Martins School of Art and Design and the Royal Academy Schools, completing her doctorate in fine arts at the University of East London in 2012. Originally using painting as a conceptual strategy to add another layer of mediation to the heavily mediated images she was exposed to, she decided briefly after completing her degree to abandon painting and began experimenting with photography and digital printing techniques.
Kemang Wa Lehulere 2017
There is an incredible story behind the first painting in Kemang Wa Lehulere’s exhibition Bird Song. It seems as though the artist ferreted out a fragment of a mural under the KunstHalle’s white plaster. In point of fact, however, it is the reproduction of a picture from the former house of Gladys Mgudlandlu. In the 1960 she was the first black female artist in South Africa to have regular exhibitions at galleries, apartheid notwithstanding. On account of her predilection for birds, she was also called “Bird Lady.” But Mgudlandlu’s fame waned quickly. When she died in 1979, her work was worth so little that the murals were simply painted over.
Basim Magdy 2016
Bodiless voices speak of the evanescence of memory. In silent forests, stone monuments look at us as though they want to tell us they will outlive us all. They are surrounded by a blended aura of brilliant colors. Insects glide over the surface of a pond and buzz away. Basim Magdy’s 2014 film The Many Colors of the Sky Radiate Forgetfulness draws the viewer into a vortex of images, sound, and text, conjuring up a time in which the apocalypse seems to have already taken place. Nature recaptures its lost territory. Save for one relic, people have been forgotten. And what remains does not attest to a glorious past. We see war memorials and stuffed animals—museum objects that celebrate battles, the dead, and the subjugation of nature.
Koki Tanaka 2015
The Japanese artist calls his work “art activism.” A Vulnerable Narrator, his exhibition as “Artist of the Year” at the Deutsche Bank KunstHalle, is akin to a workshop linking projects, ideas, and documents spanning nearly a decade. It documents the path from Tanaka’s early experiments with mass products and materials to his later collective actions and performances. Videos such as Everything Is Everything (2006) and Walking Through (2009) recall a series of experiments. In them, he subjects cheap products from household goods and hardware stores to various tests. The artist, born in 1975, is interested in how sensitively and openly we perceive everyday things and how we can develop a new relationship to them.
Victor Man 2014
Victor Man’s paintings look like they have darkened over centuries. There’s something sacred about them, like the images and devotional objects hanging in the faint light of chapels and churches. In our enlightened, medialized world, in which everything is on the surface and things have to be “brought to light,” they look like something from another era. His works take the viewer into an enigmatic cosmos in which strange metamorphoses take place under the veil of darkness. In Man’s work, animate and inanimate, human and animal, male and female, appear to be in constant exchange and, as in an alchemistic process, undergoing a fusion.
Imran Qureshi 2013
It seems as though the huge golden ovals hanging in the central room of the Deutsche Bank KunstHalle have absorbed the blood-red paint on them. In the interior of the egg shapes, blossoms sprout from red splashes. As though through delicate veins, the red pulsates over the canvases, drips, sprays, flows. Imran Qureshi’s paintings are at once cold and warm. Covered with gold leaf, they emanate an almost sacred stringency. They hang in the room like icons. But inside the works, everything is full of movement, organic, dirty, human. Qureshi’s paintings convey both a kind of viral anarchic energy and extreme control. This tension runs through all of his current work, reflecting a very fundamental real conflict. Order can create clarity and tranquility, but it can also restrict and suppress. We are afraid of change, unrest, and destruction, which can culminate in violence and bloodshed. At the same time, they form the basis of the creative process, for the genesis of something new.
Roman Ondák 2012
Roman Ondák deepens our understanding of social conventions and hierarchies, whether in the art world or society at large. His installations and actions question prevailing conditions in a subtle but deliberate manner. To examine what is seemingly self-evident in order to generate new ideas for shaping our future is a goal of Deutsche Bank’s commitment to art. This is why the bank honors international contemporary artists pursuing unique paths with its Artist of the Year award. The focus is on younger artists for whom works on paper or photography play a key role in their oeuvres. Following Kenyan artist Wangechi Mutu in 2010 and the Moroccan Yto Barrada in 2011, Ondák, who was born in 1966 in Žilina, Slovakia, and is one of the most exciting figures in Eastern Europe, is Deutsche Bank’s 2012 Artist of the Year, a selection made on the recommendation of the Deutsche Bank Global Art Advisory Council, comprised of the renowned curators Okwui Enwezor, Hou Hanru, Udo Kittelmann, and Nancy Spector.
Yto Barrada 2011
For over a decade now, Yto Barrada has been intensively investigating the social realities in her native country of Morocco. In 2011, as Deutsche Bank's “Artist of the Year,” she showed the exhibition Riffs at the Deutsche Guggenheim. Following its premiere in Berlin, the show made guest appearances in WIELS, Brussels; the Renaissance Society, Chicago; the IKON Gallery in Birmingham; and the Museo d’arte contemporanea Roma (MACRO), Rome. The exhibition tour ended in 2013 at the Fotomuseum Winterthur. An entire floor in the Deutsche Bank Towers in Frankfurt is dedicated to the artist’s work.
Wangechi Mutu 2010
Mutu, who has been living in New York for a long time, counters the notion of an “African” artist drawing from her native culture with images from multiple perspectives. Like many “diaspora artists,” she combines elements of her native culture with those of the West.