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The Blackboard shows a loose collection of events organized by the Städelschule Community. The Hochschule für Bildende Künste–Städelschule is not responsible for the content.The Blackboard shows a loose collection of events organized by the Städelschule Community. The Hochschule für Bildende Künste–Städelschule is not responsible for the content. The Blackboard shows a loose collection of events organized by the Städelschule Community. The Hochschule für Bildende Künste–Städelschule is not responsible for the content. 
Beyond the Pavement
CRAWL WEEKS
Summit of Beauty and Love
Seeds of Regression
SHE LIKES TO COLLECT ROCKS
Image: Nathalie Grenzhaeuser, Arctic research, Radar balloon for atmospheric research, 2016
OBSERVING SYSTEMS
And This is Us 2025
Đồ chơi lắp ráp
Design: Abetare Prenici, Lena Preuß, Olivia Völlnagel
Fluid
Die Wand
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Jimmy Robert Hanging II 2010  Jimmy Robert Courtesy Stigter Van Doesburg und Tanya Leighton Gallery
Jimmy Robert, Hanging II, 2010, © Jimmy Robert, Courtesy Stigter Van Doesburg und Tanya Leighton Gallery

JIMMY ROBERT

ALL DRESSED UP AND NOWHERE TO GO

28.10.2022 – 15.01.2025

Opening weekend
Friday, October 28, 2022, starting 6 pm: Opening
Saturday, October 29, 2022, 2 pm: Artist talk between Jimmy Robert and curator Christina Lehnert
Sunday, October 30, 2022, 2pm: Curator's tour with Christina Lehnert and Çağla Ilk

Curators: Christina Lehnert and Çağla Ilk

Staatliche Kunsthalle Baden-Baden
Lichtentaler Allee 8a
Baden-Baden 76530

All dressed up and nowhere to go is a comprehensive solo exhibition by Guadeloupe-born French artist Jimmy Robert (*1975).

Posing, dancing, dressing, voguing, or cruising: Jimmy Robert's works deal with different forms of movement, be they in art, queer culture, or public space. Movement is not neutral, but also says something about its actor: it is directed, unified, and becomes a marker in relation to society. As a public building, the Kunsthalle also prescribes various movements that are structured by its architecture: Strolling in the nineteenth-century park, towards the Kunsthalle, an Art Nouveau building, climbing up to the exhibition rooms via the representative stone- and finally marble staircase into the main hall and the course of the rooms of the White Cube.

Here the exhibition begins with a new installation designed by Jimmy Robert in collaboration with Studio Diogo Passarinho. Through large mirrored walls, it initially places the viewer at the center. The labyrinthine architecture formulates a stage and its backstage, a dressing room, a new space, and a trompe-l’œil image. It conveys an intimate emptiness in the exhibition space of the public institution, in which the visitors are initially confronted with themselves. The title All dressed up and nowhere to go thus poses the question of belonging, position, one's own gaze, and that of others. Clothing as costume, dressing and undressing, stage and backstage are ideas that run through the installation as well as the photo series created on-site. Performance, as a practice in the artist's oeuvre, is dissected here in time and space and can be experienced as an installation and as the site of a temporally displaced event.

Through a chronology of early to recent performance, photography, and film, the exhibition presents the artist's multimedia oeuvre over the last twenty years, revealing the network of recurring themes that preoccupy the artist in his work. The focus is on the body, mostly his own, in relation to different external structures: gaze and space. Through constant retelling, relating, and adapting, Robert becomes aware of the dynamics of visibility and attribution.
What history and socialization do gazes have, or places? How does the gaze/place structure one's being?

For Robert, the body is this locus of inside and outside. It is both exposed to the politics of the outside gaze and a political body judged by its gender, race, and sexuality. Performance and filmic works such as Brown Leatherette (2002), Vanishing Point (2014), and Imitations of Lives (2019) play with this confluence and intersection of social space, architecture, and body. They construct the fabric of actor and viewer, space and movement in relation to place and its history.

Contact
Hochschule für Bildende Künste–Städelschule
Dürerstraße 10
60596 Frankfurt am Main
Daimlerstraße 32
60314 Frankfurt am Main
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