Berlin - 2 September 2010 - 3 October 2010
Pierre Juillerat _ Alpha Floor
Pierre Juillerat | alpha floor
Eröffnung Donnerstag, 2. September 2010, 19 Uhr
Laufzeit 3. September bis 2. Oktober 2010
Geöffnet Do – Sa 15 – 19 Uhr sowie täglich nach Absprache
dr. julius | ap, Leberstraße 60, D–10829 Berlin
T 030 24374349, www.dr-julius.de, info@dr-julius.de
The solo exhibition alpha floor of Swiss painter Pierre Juillerat is a consistent continuation of the New Concrete and Constructive Art program by dr. julius | ap. Juillerat‘s work expands the range of the artists represented by dr. julius | ap with a strictly geometric painting position.
In most cases, Juillerat‘s paintings show stripe and line structures that are set on various image carriers with very high precision, always using his own and intuitively chosen specific set of colours. Due to the orientation to vanishing points lying far outside the image area, these structures often appear like detail views of larger, wider spatial contexts. Shifting these points may breake geometric laws, and the perspective effect even increases the impression of vast space.
Pierre Juillerat, born 1967 in Bern, has completed a degree in architecture ETH Zurich, pursued by a long career as an airline pilot. In parallel, he independently developed his geometric painting style, which combines impetus from both fields. The opposite of the firmly structured, geometrically planned and bright dynamic clarity in his work is evident.
Pierre Schwerzmann, painter and teacher, notes on this:
The human perception of the automated movement, as in instrument flight, the hostile environment of high altitudes, which provides colours with their icy cold temperature and causes the alloy of the materials, shape the work of Pierre Juillerat. The aluminum sheets designed for speed are taken from a decontextualisation of aviation; they are a contrast to the slowness of the act of painting. It is a serial production technology, which faces the primitive and unique action of the painter. His paintings attempt to exist outside their own borders. Colours flowing over the edges are transitional areas. Non-Existing and emptiness are just as decisive as the visible portions of the work. What we have here in front of us is a unique and specific vision of the void and the tension that comes from an apparent calm.
Matthias Bleyl, professor at the Kunsthochschule Berlin-Weissensee, writes about these works:
The constructive potential that the seemingly perspective painting by Pierre Juillerat contains, predestinates it for an expansion into real space, for which approaches in the draft stage already exist. His way of working, which also includes various rigid image carriers, like aluminum sheets or plexiglass panels, is well-suited for the production of three-dimensional, but at the same time picturesque objects. This step would be, given the recent development of his paintwork, very consistent, and probably it is just a matter of time before it is realized. Meanwhile, however, only the pictures remain with their seemingly complex nesting and broken spaces, which still reveal themselves as pure surface paintings.

