Nana Mandl : never enough

24 October - 22 November 2024
Overview

never enough

 

 

mirror mirror

on the wall

it's your call

your reflection

facing perfection

reliable distraction

from the

screaming toddler 

to hear

the fits to fear

the sleepless nights

the toothbrush fights

the greasy fingers wiped 

in the couch

the ouch 

it's tough

and never enough

never time for bluff

few moments to fake

you get no brake

from mental load

from clothes to fold

dishes to wash

garbage to toss

meals to prepare

monsters to scare

tears to dry

tears to cry

sighs to sigh

why why why

is there so much

to care

to be aware

to feel unfair

comitted to heal

and dare to reveal

because the 24/7

promised heaven

might not feel 

like the perfect deal

ready to seal

for real

Nana Mandl (b. 1991 in Graz, Austria) studied at the Kunsthochschule Berlin Weissensee and received her diploma in fine arts at the University of Applied Arts, Vienna. Nana Mandl is also a founding member and current contributor to the internationally active artist collective CLUB FORTUNA and winner of the 2024 Strabag Art Award.
 
In her colourful material collages, pictures, prints and sculptures, Nana Mandl develops possible visual implementations of today's media challenges and excessive demands. Her haptic collages combine elements of painting, embroidery and drawing with forms of communicative-representative spheres of advertising, fashion, pop culture and social media.
Works
Press release
In never enough, Nana Mandl presents a visually expansive and materially rich series of works that delves into the complexities of modern motherhood, digital culture, and self-representation. Through her intricate, multi-layered collages—composed of fabric, digitally printed textiles, embroidery, and drawing—Mandl invites us to explore what lies beneath the surface.
 
Central to Mandl’s work is her exploration of materials. Textiles, historically linked to female artistry, become a platform where contradictions and ambiguities play out. The fabric is both medium and metaphor for the societal pressures and personal identities that weave together in the experience of motherhood. Sourcing inspiration online and mining her digital archive, Mandl seeks images that resonate - through content, colour, silhouette or instinct. These are enlarged and simplified, printed and cut into large paper shapes, becoming patterns from which patterns are cut, forming a patchwork of texture and colour. This echoes the sensory overload of the digital world, where countless images and information constantly jostle for our attention. Mandl’s works play with the possibility of a further sensory exploration of an image, allowing the viewer to engage and contend with an image beyond a surface layer. Through this laborious, multi-step process, Mandl contrasts the instant consumption of digital images with careful craftsmanship and in slowing down the image-making process, she transforms the intangible into something material, questioning the surface, the ambiguity of representation, and the contradictions of selfhood.
 
Motherhood, filtered through the lens of selfie culture, is a central theme. Mandl draws inspiration from mirror selfies of mothers with their children—intimate, yet highly curated moments of self-presentation. These images challenge traditional depictions of motherhood, positioning women as independent, strong, and self-aware. The child can be understood as an accessory in these scenes, underscoring the focus on the mother's reflection and her control over how she presents herself. Perhaps this subverts the patriarchal and capitalistic ideal of motherhood as a form of self-sacrifice, revealing instead the complexity between visibility and invisibility, empowerment and objectification. Mandl critiques the idealised vision of motherhood projected by a patriarchal, capitalist society, revealing the unrealistic, yet culturally pervasive, image of the ‘perfect’ mother.
 
Another key element of Mandl’s work is text. Upon the surface of large scale works, letters are sewn which create a poetic dialogue with the visual elements of the figurative collages. Using rhythm, rhyme and double meaning, the text complicates the construction of meaning and context within the digital and the physical, the personal and the collective and the immediate and the profound.
 
Mandl’s works unravel how digital culture and technology shapes our understanding of ourselves and others. Evoking the ever-changing nature of online existence, where identity and representation are constantly redefined, never enough invites reflection on the contradictions and complexity of modern life, social roles and pressures. Operating as haptic invitations to see beyond the surface, they call attention to the sensory richness of their materiality along with the tension between touch and image in the digital era.
 
Installation Views