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City Galerie Wien

XENIA BOND @ ART-O-RAMA

City Galerie Wien

We are proud to announce our participation in  Art-O-Rama Marseille 2024 28th of August - 2nd of September 2024  with XENIA BOND in a shared booth with  Anna Zemánková (Sophie Tappeiner)

Two artists, two worlds, two traditions and backgrounds—both women, both introspective. 

Anna Zemánková, born in Moravia, present-day Czech Republic in 1908, began creating her intricate paintings and collages in her home at the age of fifty. Xenia Bond, born in London, United Kingdom, in 1992, left home early to study art and become a sculptor. 

Both artists have developed extensive systems of forms from which they draw their aesthetic. These systems follow a highly specific logic that lurks under the surface yet asserts an internal coherence that makes sense intuitively from every perspective.

Anna Zemánková's oeuvre is dominated by floral imagery. Although, the only resemblance to familiar flowers is their upward growth. Over the years, she created an invented herbarium of otherworldly organisms, a codex of sorts with recurring patterns, shapes, and structures, with each of the resulting works being unique. This visual language is uniquely her own. Similarly, Xenia Bond's work is characterized by systematized forms that evolve into stylized idioms, which she then layers and collages to create new visual narratives. This language is uniquely her own. 

Both artists exhibit an extreme sensitivity in their work. While Zemánková's meticulous attention to detail is evident in each leaf and the deliberate choices behind her compositions, Bond's intrigue lies in the tactile quality of materials, the sensory impact of colour and the nuanced interplay of meanings. She creates forms rich with double, triple, and quadruple entendres. Her work can be likened to a bouquet of ideas, where each element harmonizes with the next. 

Zemánková described her creations as “growing flowers that are not grown anywhere else,” reflecting her interior life and thoughts. The same can be said of Bond, whose work is inimitable and rooted in her unique gestures and sub-cognitive drives, transformed into tangible forms. Both artists claim simplicity in their methods, eschewing mysticism. 

Both artists bridge the microcosmic and macroscopic realms. Zemánková with structures of imaginary plants that then appear to look rather like unknown planetary formations. Bond with material and idea and lastly the absurdity of life quickly and elegantly taken down by a little joke, a jab.

Xenia Bond (b.1992, London) works in sculpture and installation. She graduated from the Stäedelscule in Frankfurt under Judith Hopf and the Slade School of Fine Art in London. Bond’s exhibitions include: City Galerie Wien, Husslehof, APT Gallery, Zona Mista, Studio Picknick, and Neue Alte Brücke. She is interested in the formal relationship of materials and their reception as emotives, and communicating external relationships in her life. Bond’s works are neither immersive nor “looking outside.” These polarities are avoided. Instead the aim is to provoke a reaction between the imagination of the self and the viewer. The drift of signs and possible narratives, both concrete and imagined, characterize Bond’s works.

Self-taught artist Anna Zemánková (b.1908 in Hodolany, Austria-Hungary, d. 1986 in Mnišek pod Brdy, Czechoslovakia) described her work as "growing flowers that are not grown anywhere else." She took up her artistic practice in the early 1960s, at over fifty years old, creating her lyrical compositions during the early hours before dawn, from four to seven in the morning, before attending to domestic duties. During this time, she created an imaginary herbarium of otherworldly organisms on paper. Her work is characterised by remarkably complex combinations of ink, pastel, perforations, threads and textiles, forming an ominously beautiful botanical world of ever-metamorphosing shapes. Roger Cardinal remarked, "Her sweet and docile flower paintings leave a poisonous aftertaste." Despite the difficulty of exhibiting publicly under the cultural politics implemented by the communist Party of Czechoslovakia, Anna Zemánková received recognition for her art during her lifetime. Notably, her works were included in the 1979 exhibition "Outsiders," curated by Roger Cardinal and Victor Musgrave at the Hayward Gallery in London. While her oeuvre has long been established among the most important representatives of Art Brut, Zemánková is increasingly gaining recognition in a broader context.








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