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Biography

 

Marjolein Rothman (Eibergen, the Netherlands, 1974) received her education at the A.K.I. in Enschede (1994-1999) and was an artist-in-residence at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten, Amsterdam in 2003 and 2004. She has been awarded the Dutch Royal Prize for Painting in 2004. She has exhibited in the Netherlands at: Nieuw Dakota Amsterdam, De Kunsthal, Rotterdam, De Vleeshal, Middelburg, Stadsgalerij Heerlen, De Vishal Haarlem, De Nederlandsche Bank and Motive Gallery Amsterdam. Abroad, her works were presented at the Fiac Paris, ARCO Madrid, Art Cologne and Art Miami. In March 2009 Rothman had her first soloshow abroad, at Wetterling Gallery, Stockholm which was followed by a second solo exhibition at the gallery in May 2012. In December 2013, she showed her work in Antwerp at NK Gallery, together with Judit Hettema. Since  2011 Marjolein Rothman lectures Fine Art at ArtEZ Enschede. She lives and works in Amsterdam.

 

In her work Marjolein Rothman seeks by way of painting to deconstruct specific cultural symbols. In 2003 she started to paint official monuments, historical figures and relics. The series ‘Iconography I’ (2006), consists of large-scale portraits of two 19th century French saints, Bernadette de Soubirous and Therese de Lisieux. Successively anonymous figures were portrayed in the same manner in ‘Iconography II’ (2007). In November 2008 Marjolein Rothman presented a new series called ‘Our Land’. ‘Our Land’ deals with the Dutch colonial past and was inspired by photographs taken by Dutch pioneers. Her new body of work entitled ‘Gaze’ questions specific aesthetic codes. Her work presents an on-going investigation of the act of looking or gazing. In all of these series Rothman creates material metaphors for the ambiguity that characterizes specific representations. Iconic images of the past reappear in her paintings fragmented, incomplete or as a mere shadow or projection.

Rijksakademie 2004, photo: Ilse Frech

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