Omer Tiroche Contemporary Art is proud to present its inaugural exhibition at the new Mayfair premises. Bringing together eight German and Austrian Post-War and Contemporary artists, the selected works range from the early 1970s to 2008, and feature patriarchs of the New European Painting School: Gerhard Richter’s squeegee curlicues are punctuated by Sigmar Polke’s magnified newspaper pixels; Anselm Kiefer’s metaphysical layers of sediment sit beside the experimental works of Gunther Uecker, Anselm Reyle and Franz West.

Conveying the aesthetic and social tumult of a shared cultural heritage, these powerful metaphors for a fragmented identity are expressed purely through the use of unorthodox methods: from Dirk Skreber’s haunting Barbarella, rising from the ashes of burning and picking techniques; to the rusty, blood-spattered canvases of Hermann Nitsch, a nod to the Lady Macbeth-like guilt forever on the hands of those who attempt to forget.

Touching on themes of religion, guilt, violence, authority and fragility, at the heart of the exhibition lies a deliberate erosion of boundary. Through choosing a variety of media that ranges from papier-mâché to wilted sunflowers, the artists are ‘making the familiar strange’; irreverently dismantling and violating tradition. The materiality of the artworks contemplate the impossibility and immorality of attempting to reset the clock, by physically embodying the layers of time we have accumulated.