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Michael Dohr
Point of No Return -
Highlights and Collections include Museum Angerlehner (Thalheim bei Wels, Austria), SOHO House Collection (London, UK). He was awarded the Frank Bowling Scholarship (2021)
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Central to this investigation is a reimagining of the body as hybrid and adaptable, no longer a single entity but part of an evolving system. Dohr’s drawings, in particular, bring to mind bodily substance: red pastel marks evoke fleshy, fibrous materials and draw us into dense and chaotic spaces where branching structures resemble bones, tree roots, neural networks, tunnels or switchboards. We follow these lines in search of cohesion or clarity only for them to stutter, fade away or dissolve into dead ends. There’s a push and pull between structure and entropy, precision and collapse, with multiple iterations suggesting obsessive, almost desperate attempts at landing upon a solution.In Stacks, a series of large-scale mixed-media works, this fragmentation becomes tactile. Torn canvases are layered with linen, cardboard and metal, suggesting both wreckage and repair. These works operate like puzzles with no fixed solution, embracing uncertainty and surprise. Dohr has described this process as a form of problem-making, allowing disparate elements to interact until they coalesce into a fragile logic. It is a process both intuitive and alchemical, echoing the chaos of a world in transformation.
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Dohr draws on a wide variety of source material, spanning medical imagery, construction debris, plant life and geological strata, to create works that occupy an unsettling space between organic and inorganic, human and post-human. His Nest sculptures, for example, take inspiration from natural forms to conjure hybrid objects that appear at once mechanical and alive, vulnerable and threatening. Silicone interiors suggest bodily tissue or the pulp of a fruit, cavities where something has been removed or might soon emerge.Throughout the exhibition, there is a tension between surface and depth, symbols and matter, the flatness of code and the weight of flesh. Dohr is attuned to the metaphors encoded in materials: stains that speak of accidents, torn canvases that suggest rupture, drops that fall but never land. His works grapple with a world where the body is increasingly dislocated and yet remain rooted in physical experience, in texture and the insistence of form. In this way, Dohr offers a space where rupture makes room for strange beauty and reinvention.
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Michael Dohr: Point of No Return
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