Kippenberger, Martin

(b Dortmund, 25 February 1953 - d Vienna, 7 March 1997). Martin Kippenberger was one of the most versatile and prolific post-war German artists. Exuberantly energetic, he produced an enormous and variegated oeuvre, ranging from painting, prints and sculpture to Installation and Happening. He was engaged in almost all aspects of art, being actively involved in organising exhibitions, and worked in publishing between the 1970s and his untimely death. His chief concern was questioning the assumptions of society at large and the art scene in particular while plumbing the possibilities that might remain for contemporary art. Assuming an intentional amateurishness, he attacked the art industry in provocatively trite or ironical pictorial inventions, which could on occasion be deliberately tasteless, and in nonsense texts. He was never squeamish about overstepping the bounds of good taste. Martin Kippenberger grew up in a cultured, art-loving family. After doing badly at school and dropping out of an apprenticeship as a decorator, he began to study painting at the Hamburg Art Academy in 1972. Kippenberger embarked on his first large-scale art project in 1976 while spending a year in Florence and it was followed by a catalogue in 1977. In 1978 Kippenberger moved to Berlin, where he founded 'Kippenbergers Buro' with Gisela Capitain and managed Club SO 36. In the course of organising exhibitions and concerts, Kippenberger began to buy work by contemporaries and met Max Hetzler, who would become his agent. In the 1980s Kippenberger produced many of his own works and had his first large-scale exhibition at a museum in Darmstadt in 1986: 'Miete Strom Gas' ['Rent Electricity Gas']. He also collaborated with Albert Oehlen, Werner Buttner and Georg Herold on joint projects. In 1990 Kippenberger was a visiting professor at the Stadelschule in Frankfurt and taught at the Gesamthochschule Kassel in 1992. A large-scale, long-term project that would keep him busy for the rest of his life was the realisation of a world-wide underground railway, for which he designed and built an entrance in Syros, Greece, in 1993, another in Dawson City, Canada, in 1995 and a third in 1997 at the Leipzig Trade Fair. It was posthumously supplemented that same year by a ventilation shaft executed after his plans in Munster and a portable entrance at documenta X in Kassel.