Korea TV interview
at Woo Gallery
Q. I heard that your artworks currently exhibited are receiving a lot of attention and positive response. It is expected that the atmosphere perceived may vary, given the diverse cities and countries. In your opinion, where do you fell the most enthusiastic response is coming from?
A > I think one reason for the great success of the new paintings is the people in my paintings, no matter in which cities or parts of the world I paint them - my figures in the paintings are the ideal image. These people are independent of superficial characteristics such as skin colors,gender,value of clothes,religions etc. In my paintings exits asl colours of faces like also blue,green and grey,without influence to their location or expression.
But an important element remains the local culture, this can be different in all people, and is still compatible with a global world. Since no one takes away from the other when he represents a different local culture, but everyone always adds something new. In the painted cities such as Mumbai, Amsterdam, Paris, London, etc., one feels in my new pictures therefore even more clearly the urban culture, the way of life, as the most important positive and unifying element.
As a viewer, you virtually become a visitor who adapts to the existing culture, and enjoys it, for example, in a street cafe in Paris.
What is important for the viewers of my pictures , is the positive human image, I love people! It may not seem so to us like that through media coverage, but humanity has been developing positively for centuries, for example, in terms of mortality per 100,000 inhabitants. (It doesn't matter whether it is due to illness or wars).
The positive image of humanity is also a philosophy that is similar in other artists of Woo Gallery, for example, my colleague Han, Choongseok.
My collectors agree with me that the world will be better with more positive energy and its representation.
Q. What do you think is the reason why many artists collect and exhibit specific objects?
A > Conceptual Art has evolved steadily since Duchamp's readymades. Today, installations made from everyday objects are generally accepted art. At my home, I have often painted and used many everyday objects in an artistically altered way. To this day, everyday objects like bags are an important part of my paintings. Similar to e.g. Uecker who worked for example with nails, my bag paintings provided more acceptance of everyday objects in the current short story.
Q. By rearranging collected shopping bags on the screen and exhibiting them, you expand the viewers’ receptivity to new senses through your artwork. As a result, the public naturally enters your world. Do you consider this to be a coincidental occurrence, or do you think it is inevitable?
A > I think the connection is more causal. I developed during the study the technique to collage from bags as a painting ground and then to paint over. The inspiration was always the possibility (in addition to the surface, for example, print on the bag, or the image motif of the paintings) to transport a discoverable content (the inside of the bag or the many hidden details in the pictures).
But by showing both elements- the surface and the discoverable, hidden connections and details, the paintings become communicative. They invite the viewer by depicting recognizable a certain known place, such as Amsterdam or London, to then only in the second and third level of observation to reveal the details and deeper connections.
But by depicting the superficial city views known from postcards or social media postings, I also want to keep what this representation promises. The real cities are not just postcards, images or Instagram posts, but there are people living, there is nois,life,odors, culture, relationships, love, heartbreak, joy and sorrow and many other interactions and many more deeper poetic experiences than one might initially suspect from a superficial view. Of course, painting all this involves a lot of work, but by showing a lot of details, it manages to depict such a lot of information that its discovery can create a positive poetic energy, no matter which part of the picture you look at more closely.
Q. It is a question that many of your admirers are curious about. How do you collect your signature shopping bags, which are a prominent feature in your artwork?
A > Mainly I find the bags during my many trips, which was also strengthened by the increasing international exhibition activity in recent years. But also collectors and gallery owners provide me with bags from their respective home cities, which I then get sent or can pick up at exhibitions there.
Q. The utopia you depict through your artwork feels closer to a utopia of common good rather than an individual utopia. What is your personal utopia, separate from your artistic work?
A >Since I have always pursued and elaborated artistically exactly and authentically only my own personal view of the world, the artistic image corresponds exactly to my own imagination and is therefore also so unique. This also includes the utopias, which are by definition representations of a positive future. So my paintings simply show what I think the future of a city could be.
Through my paintings my own utopia is actually already realized. But to be able to travel the world as a successful international artist, to exhibit everywhere and to do every day what I enjoy, namely painting, and to have a great family is of course also an individual realization of utopia.
But the term utopia is rather a societal one, that is, a vision of a conceivable positive future. This idea is already very individual even with its creator Thomas More (1) . I think the realization of an individual utopia as a social model would run out on a bad dictatorship and would be a disaster. We should pay much more attention to the fact that such utopias can serve us as orientation and not as realizable maxims. From the pursuit of many different utopias in the form of individual visions, a social current emerges, which can then bring society as a whole further in a positive sense.
Here, too, I think it is important to present the future as a whole in a positive light, because this creates ideal images that take away our fear of the future and, in the best case, introduce ideas for positive developments.
Q. Another characteristic of your artwork is its vivid sense of presence. Can you share whether you preserve this sense of presence by sketching on-site before working, relying on your memory, or discovering it through photographs?
A To be able to paint a particular view, for example, this of New York Brooklyn, I need in any case the personal experience, the feelings and impressions,the people who I met on the spot, I usually make aquarelle studies on the spot to depict features such as the local color or distribution of light-dark contrasts. Photos help to be able to depict special perspectives, or just to recognize where you can modify the motif without its credibility suffers. In the large paintings I often change the point of view, I then need all conceivable information from my own studies, photos or Google earth etc , to be able to implement the composition perfectly.
Q. Your current artwork can be seen as a piece of indirect communication that sparks conversations through shopping bags as a medium. In contrast, your past projects in various places such as art museums were seen as direct channels for engaging with the public. Do you have any plans to pursue similar projects again? If so, what would you like yo achieve through this new project?
A > the interactive bags projects are a conceptual addition to my paintings since many years. The basic idea is simply to ask the viewers what they think of the bag as part of the art world, what comes to mind or inspires them. The results of such bag surveys are then exhibited by me in the museum exhibitions as an artistic installation in a prominent place in the museum. At the moment such a project is running in a museum in Germany parallel to a large exhibition of my paintings.
Such projects have already taken place all over the world, for example in Brazil, Miami, New York, Greece, Athens, Germany, Ukraine, Spain, etc.. (2)
At such exhibitions, the viewers are practically doubly invited, once to participate in the interactive bag project and at the same time you are invited by my paintings to get to know the Thitz world and my artistic approach to bag and art. At every exhibition in a large urban gallery or museum I ask the curators if they can imagine to implement such a bag project during my exhibition. Of course, I would also like to realize such an interactive bag project during a museum exhibition in Korea.

Stuttgarter Zeitung 24.9.2024




"if art becomes political..."


Paris TV programme with moderator Michael Friemel and THITZ
Experience Paris with one of the famous bag pictures by the artist THITZ Paris.
Take a look here:
Program notes from ARD,BR,SR
<font color="#ffff00">-=https://doksite.de/de/tv/1194613=- proudly presents
www.br.de/fernsehen/ard-alpha/programmkalender/ausstrahlung-1573018.html
www.sr.de/sr/home/der_sr/kommunikation/aktuell/20160314_pm_dwih_paris100~_print-1.html





Frank Elstner's show "People of the Week" with the famous artist THITZ.
See the film now :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JEj4_RUyeLo
(Foto von Klaus Schultes )








































































