







Peppi Bottrop
Dotv, 2022-2023
Acrylic, charcoal and graphite on canvas
200 x 180 cm
78 3/4 x 70 7/8 in
78 3/4 x 70 7/8 in
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In this new series of paintings Peppi Bottrop experiments for the first time with a distinctive and vibrant copper pigment, evoking the rust that forms on industrial objects. For the...
In this new series of paintings Peppi Bottrop experiments for the first time with a distinctive and vibrant copper pigment, evoking the rust that forms on industrial objects. For the artist, copper is an unpretentious material. Highly conductive, it derives from the earth, is hidden in cables snaking through our walls and carried in coins in our pockets. Bottrop, who bears the name of the German town in which he was born, grew up in the industrial districts of the Ruhrgebiet, once the country’s largest and most prosperous coal-mining region. As one mine after another shut down, the expression “industrial nature” was coined to describe the wild vegetation that developed on abandoned production sites, and it is this very dichotomy, or schism, between industry and nature, that Bottrop explores in his practice. Treating the canvas as a privileged site to exorcise his memories of place, Bottrop psychically mines his own past to create frenetically rendered cartographic recollections, which, though profoundly personally, are open-ended enough to allow the viewer to project their own urban reminiscences.