Gregor Hildebrandt "Cherries Bloom in April"

Gallery Perrotin Tokyo
Starts in 2 days

Artists

Gregor Hildebrandt
Perrotin Tokyo is pleased to announce Cherries Bloom in April —the first solo exhibition in Japan by German artist Gregor Hildebrandt. The following is an essay authored by artist and curator Andreas Schlaegel on the occasion of this exhibition.

“…And Yet Something Makes Cherries Blossom in April” is the full line which inspired Gregor Hildebrandt’s title for his first exhibition in Japan. It comes from a rather obscure early-eighties song by German singersongwriter Konstantin Wecker, in which the singer voices petty grievances that keep him from thinking outside the box and venturing into the realm of his imagination. But then, with emotional piano flourishes, the song takes an unexpected turn: suddenly, cherries blossom, rekindling a sense of life and opening a window for change, creativity, and new dreams.

Gregor Hildebrandt’s passion for art, poetry, and music is as extensive as it is infectious. His ability to internalize and contextualize what he sees, reads, and hears informs the connections he draws in precise and distinct material form – poetic and open-ended, inviting viewers’ reflections.

The images we encounter in Gregor Hildebrandt’s work are nearly always created in an intense dialogue with music, striking a balance between heightened presence and notable absence. He refrains from offering mere illustrations or direct visual translations of music. Instead, he presents images created from the very materials music recordings are made of – be it tape or vinyl. Fully embracing
their materiality, texture, and colors, he also integrates the connotations of the music contained within them. Es ist Juli (It’s July, 2024) and Sommernächte fliegen ohne Hast (Summer Nights Fly Without Haste, 2024) are the first t wo l ines o f a s ong b y another German singer-songwriter, Klaus Hoffmann, describing the emotions and fantasies of an exuberant village party. The canvases show a remarkably detailed field o f d aisies i n Hildebrandt’s trademark style, where individual strands of tape are applied to a canvas partially coated with adhesive. Once removed, the magnetized layers adhere to the glue-coated areas, forming a negative image, which is then mounted onto another canvas to create its matching positive counterpart. What is absent in one canvas is present in the other.

Personal references often find their way into his works, such as a column of stacked compression-molded records from the back catalog of his label, Grzegorzki Records. Inspired by the colors and patterns of a Missoni bathrobe he received, Bonjour Monsieur Grzegorzki (2025) is a self-portrait that pays homage to a classic painting from art history, Gustave Courbet’s The Meeting or Bonjour Monsieur Courbet (1854). Courbet shocked his contemporaries by portraying himself at eye level with his patron, asserting the artist’s independence. In Hildebrandt’s column, it is “his” artists who give him cover.

A fresh body of work fills an entire room in the exhibition, reflecting the theme of cherry blossoms suggested by the title: a series of seven or eight tape paintings in various smaller formats, no longer black or brown, but a surprisingly bright red. Unlike his other tape paintings, they stand alone, lacking positive or negative counterparts. Together, as an ensemble, the red tape paintings perform a Reigen, a circular dance.

The artist created these from the red tape that, in compact cassettes, precedes the magnetized tape onto which sound can be recorded. Collected over many years, they are rare and precious remnants from previous work (only a few centimeters of lead-in tape exist in every cassette, and red ones are particularly rare). The series experiments with different shades of red, punctuated rhythmically by the end markers. Inside a cassette, the red tape embodies the silence before the music begins – akin to the moment of focus when the conductor raises the baton before the orchestra plays.

But these works also suggest a sense of renewal. The smallest painting, The Red Studio (2025), is a homage to Henri Matisse’s 1911 eponymous modernist masterpiece. But given its modest size, it could also be interpreted as a self-deprecating or tonguein-cheek tribute to Gregor Hildebrandt’s own studio practice and team. Another work reveals the cyclical nature of the series in its title: Das Ende der A-Seite ist der Beginn der B-Seite (The End of Side A is the Beginning of Side B, 2025). The end of one thing marks the beginning of something new.
A dance of silences from various origins, moments of anticipation, and moments of calm after the deep emotional engagement that only music can inspire—or the blossoming of cherries in April.

Schedule

Apr 3 (Thu) 2025-Jun 21 (Sat) 2025 

Opening Hours Information

Hours
11:00-19:00
Closed
Monday, Sunday, Holidays

Opening Reception Apr 3 (Thu) 2025 17:00 - 19:00

FeeFree
Websitehttps://www.perrotin.com/exhibitions/gregor_hildebrandt-cherries-bloom-in-april/11702
VenueGallery Perrotin Tokyo
https://www.perrotin.com/
Location1F Piramide Bldg., 6-6-9 Roppongi, Minato-ku, Tokyo 106-0032
Access1 minute walk from exit 1a or 1b at Roppongi Station on the Hibiya or Toei Oedo line.
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