Antje Majewski
Antje Majewski is a German painter and contemporary artist. Her research-based practice bridges art, ecology, anthropology, and philosophy, and often unfolds through long-term projects that combine painting with film, installation, and collaborative formats. Majewski explores relationships between people, objects, plants, and histories, addressing themes of ecological change, cultural transformation, and collective knowledge. Her major projects include The World of Gimel, Apple. An Introduction. , and How to talk with birds, trees, fish, shells, snakes, bulls and lions. In 2023 she presented The Man Who Disappeared / Amerika at neugerriemschneider, Berlin, a project linking human migration history and colonialism with artificial intelligence-assisted painting. Majewski has exhibited at institutions including Hamburger Bahnhof, Kunsthaus Graz, and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Antwerp, and her works are held in the collections of the San Francisco [Museum of Modern Art] and Museum of Art, Łódź. She is Professor of Painting at the Braunschweig University of Art.
Early life and education
Majewski was born in Marl, North Rhine-Westphalia, in 1968. From 1987 to 1995 she studied art history, history, and philosophy in Cologne, Berlin, and Florence.Practice and projects
Majewski’s practice combines painting with long-term, research-based projects that often involve collaboration with other artists, scientists and knowledge holders. Her works explore the agency of objects, ecological transformation, and cultural narratives of plants, ecosystems and artifacts.Painting
Majewski works primarily in painting, often combining realist and surrealist modes. Her canvases frequently depict objects such as stones, plants, shells, and apples, which act as characters in unfolding narratives. Critics have noted that her approach links figuration to anthropology and ecology, bridging traditional pictorial forms with research into cultural and natural histories.''Apple. An Introduction. (Over and over and once again)''
In 2010 Majewski initiated Apple. An Introduction. with Polish conceptual artist Paweł Freisler. The still-ongoing project combines her own paintings of historic apple varieties with Freisler’s carved apples, her film The Freedom of Apples, and workshops and planting projects with local communities. It has been presented at Museum of Art, Łódź, Abteiberg Museum in Mönchengladbach, and other venues. A book of the same title was published in 2015 with contributions from artists, curators, and ecological collectives.''How to talk with birds, trees, fish, shells, snakes, bulls and lions''
In 2018 Majewski presented the solo exhibition How to talk with birds, trees, fish, shells, snakes, bulls and lions at Hamburger Bahnhof in Berlin. Alongside her own paintings, films, and installations, she invited contributions from artists, Indigenous groups, and activist collectives from Brazil, Cameroon, China, Colombia, Poland, Senegal, and Hungary. The exhibition addressed interspecies communication and ecological change, and reflected her interest in creating layered, collaborative frameworks within the context of a major institutional solo presentation. Contributors included Agnieszka Brzeżańska & Ewa Ciepielewska, Carolina Caycedo, Paweł Freisler, Olivier Guesselé-Garai, Tamás Kaszás, Paulo Nazareth, Guarani-Kaiowá & Luciana de Oliveira, Issa Samb, Xu Tan, and Hervé Yamguen.''The World of Gimel''
Since 2009 Majewski has been developing The World of Gimel, a long-term project that links painting, film, and research. A central part of the work was presented in the exhibition The World of Gimel: How to Make Objects Talk at Kunsthaus Graz. The project revolves around a set of objects, including a meteorite, that serve as points of departure for her paintings, films, and texts. It incorporates contributions from artists and theorists such as Jimmie Durham, Issa Samb, and Agnieszka Polska. Frieze described the project as exploring “how objects speak” and how cultural histories are embedded in things.''The Museum in the Garage''
In 2014 Majewski, together with curator Sebastian Cichocki, presented The Museum in the Garage at Deutsche Bank Kunsthalle, Berlin and Galerija Pola Magnetyczne in Warsaw.''My Very Gestures''
In autumn 2008 the Salzburger Kunstverein presented Antje Majewski: My Very Gestures, the artist’s first comprehensive solo exhibition in Austria. The exhibition brought together works from the previous decade exploring gesture, dance, expression, and costume. Majewski became known for her series of realist paintings that addressed existential themes such as friendship, love, masquerade, and death, and the ways individuals develop in relation to society, history, and social norms.Several of the works were based on staged photographs, a method Majewski had begun as a teenager when she created photo stories with her sisters. For these images she designed costumes, sets, and face painting, later expanding the approach into dance-theatre works and films in which stagings were realized through performance. At My Very Gestures, paintings, films, sculpture, and costume were installed in dialogue, creating an immersive environment. Elements of Berlin’s Wedding district were transposed to Salzburg in collaboration with the Berlin artist Juliane Solmsdorf. The exhibition was accompanied by a publication released by Sternberg Press in New York and Berlin.