فير زملر غاليري Sfeir-Semler Gallery

MARWAN
Works from 1964 to 2008


Sfeir-Semler Gallery, Hamburg

On the occasion of what would have been his 90th birthday, Sfeir-Semler is enormously proud to present an exhibition that brings together MARWAN's early paintings from the 1960s with more recent works. A rare occurrence, this presentation puts in dialogue the various periods of the highly acclaimed artist and covers five decades of his work.

MARWAN: works from 1964 to 2008 – installation view
Exhibition view, Works from 1964 to 2008, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2024

His early paintings from the 1960s center on the human figure. Sometimes androgynous, often highly erotic, the depicted characters are decidedly physical and question the human body as an outer self.

MARWAN: works from 1964 to 2008 – installation view
Exhibition view, Works from 1964 to 2008, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2024
MARWAN, Untitled, 1965, 81x100cm, oil on canvas
MARWAN, Untitled, 1965
oil on canvas, 81 ⁠× ⁠100 ⁠⁠cm

They are also at the same time disquietingly amorphous. Their shapes trick perspective and their extremities dissolve into the background, as if the painter tried to capture their souls through the depiction of their bodily shells.

MARWAN: works from 1964 to 2008 – installation view
Exhibition view, Works from 1964 to 2008, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2024
MARWAN, Stehendes Maedchen, 1968, 162x114cm, oil on canvas
MARWAN, Stehendes Mädchen, 1968
oil on canvas, 162 ⁠× ⁠114 ⁠⁠cm
MARWAN, Untitled, 1969, 195x130cm, oil on canvas
MARWAN, Untitled, 1969
oil on canvas, 195 ⁠× ⁠130 ⁠⁠cm

In the early 70s, MARWAN’s paintings started to focus solely on the human face, using a horizontal format, and painting the human visage as a landscape, in a blur of topographical features. Over the years, they morphed into what he called “heads”, and he continued to paint these until the end. Abstract brushstrokes in earthly tones at first glance, they reveal themselves as multiple melancholic faces, layered one on top of the other, gazing straight at the viewer from the depth of the canvas.

MARWAN: works from 1964 to 2008 – installation view
Exhibition view, Works from 1964 to 2008, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2024
MARWAN, Licht (A Light), 1973, 130x195cm, oil on canvas
MARWAN, Licht (A Light), 1973
oil on canvas, 130 ⁠× ⁠195 ⁠⁠cm
MARWAN, Untitled (Head), 1978-80, 225x300cm, oil on canvas
MARWAN, Untitled (Head), 1978-1980
oil on canvas, 225 ⁠× ⁠300 ⁠⁠cm

Producing sketches, watercolor drawings, etchings or paintings, MARWAN developed his Sisyphean painting language through a meditative, spiritual approach by painting over and over the same face, often on the same canvas.

MARWAN, Untitled (Head), 2008, 228x146cm, oil on canvas
MARWAN, Untitled (Head), 2008
oil on canvas, 228 ⁠× ⁠146 ⁠⁠cm
MARWAN, Untitled (Head), 1994, 195x146cm, acrylic on canvas
MARWAN, Untitled (Head), 1994
acrylic on canvas, 195 ⁠× ⁠146 ⁠⁠cm
MARWAN, Untitled (Head), 1995, 130x97cm, oil on canvas
MARWAN, Untitled (Head), 1995
oil on canvas, 130 ⁠× ⁠97 ⁠⁠cm
MARWAN, Untitled (Head), 1986, 195x114cm, acrylic on canvas
MARWAN, Untitled (Head), 1986
acrylic on canvas, 195 ⁠× ⁠114 ⁠⁠cm

In his quasi-obsessive search for the essence of beings, and of spirits, in his quasi-mystical Sufi approach to painting, MARWAN’s work clearly carries his oriental roots. It is at the same time highly characteristic of the German expressive painting movement of 1960s Berlin. His distortion and eventually abstraction of forms led him to create overpowering canvases, showing intensely eloquent figures.

MARWAN: works from 1964 to 2008 – installation view
Exhibition view, Works from 1964 to 2008, Sfeir‑Semler Gallery, Hamburg, 2024
MARWAN, Untitled, 1968
watercolor and pencil on paper, 69.4 ⁠× ⁠55 ⁠⁠cm
MARWAN, Untitled (Head), 2005 + 2009
watercolor on paper, 51.1 ⁠× ⁠67.2 ⁠⁠cm

After his death, MARWAN’s work was presented at Sharjah Biennial 14 (2019) and Venice Biennale 57 (2017), among others. His work can be found in the collections of MoMA, New York; Hamburger Bahnhof - Nationalgalerie der Gegenwart, Berlin; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; Sharjah Art Foundation, Sharjah; Städel Museum, Frankfurt am Main; Guggenheim, Abu Dhabi; Tate Modern, London; British Museum, London; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Bibliothèque National de France, Paris; Institut du Monde Arabe, Paris; Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh; Abdul Hameed Shoman Foundation, Darat al Funun, Amman; Staatliche Museen Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Berlin; Kunsthalle Bremen; National Museum, Damascus; Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg and many international private collections.