
Anna Fasshauer
Defraction Lace, 2021
Powder-coated aluminum
205 x 130x 105 cm / 81 x 51 x 41 in
AFAS_001
Anna Fasshauer
Knot Blue, 2021
Powder-coated aluminum
246 x 170x 86 cm / 97 x 67 x 34in
AFAS_002
Anna Fasshauer
Yellow Bolero, 2021
Powder-coated aluminum
275 x 167 x 118 cm / 108 x 66 x 46 in
AFAS_003
Anna Fasshauer
Yellow and Yellow + Blue, 2020
Aluminum, lacquer
135 x 105 x 60 cm / 53x 41 x 24 in
AFAS_007
Anna Fasshauer
Triko Colore, 2020
Aluminum, lacquer
150 x 135 x 52 cm / 59 x 53 x 20 in
AFAS_005
Anna Fasshauer
Dorian Grey, 2020
Stainless steel, lacquer
118 x 123 x 33 cm / 46 x 48 x 13 in
AFAS_006
Anna Fasshauer
Gunsmoke, 2021
Aluminum, laqcuer
230 x 90 x 70 cm / 91 x 35 x 28 in
AFAS_004
German artist Anna Fasshauer's (b. 1975) eye-popping aluminum sculptures appear at first glance appear to be abstract, but soon begin to recall something familiar. Closer inspection reveals them to be gigantic straws that someone has absent-mindedly twisted and crushed into sculptural tangles. The combination of peppy colors and oversized replicas of everyday objects are highly reminiscent of Pop sculpture, notably the work of Claes Oldenburg (1929-2009). While thus being linked to the continuum of art history, the iconography of Fasshauer’s sculptures also speaks directly to the contemporary moment. Fasshauer’s sculptures invoke a pervasive sense of unease through the most commonplace of objects. Her sculptures nevertheless retain an undercurrent of humor, their cold, stiff industrial material acquiring an endearing human quality. Fasshauer’s choice of material underscores the laden, thought-provoking contrast between her art’s theme and execution.
Anna Fasshauer graduated from the Chelsea School of Art and Design in London in 2001. She has exhibited her work in group and solo shows around the world, including venues such as the Jardin des Tuileries in Paris, Kunstverein Offenburg and Kunstverein Arnsberg in Germany, and the Goethe Institute in Beirut. The artist is based in Berlin.