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René Block

 interviewed by Nicholas Zurbrugg, Eugene Carchesio and Graham Coulter-Smith

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René Block, curator of the Sydney Biennale 1990, and the Joseph Beuys exhibition which recently toured Australia, speaks about his work as a gallery dealer working with Joseph Beuys and other artists associated with the Fluxus movement.

Nicholas Zurbrugg To begin with a very general ques­tion, when did you first meet Joseph Beuys? What was it that attracted you to his work? 

René Block I met him for the first time in 1964. That was the time I decided to open a galley, and looked intensively around to put together a group of artists with whom I like to work. But I knew his work much earlier-many years earlier. In fact I first heard about him when I was sixteen years old, through an old painter in the city where Beuys grew up. I grew up not far from this place, and sometimes when I was at college I would meet this painter Hanns Lamers in the after­noons and he would show me drawings and small sculptures by Beuys. Lamers and Joseph were close friends in a father/son relationship and Lamers was the artistic centre in this small provincial town. My friend­ship with Lamers started in 1958 or 1959. 

Eugene Carchesio At that time Beuys had never had an exhibition? 

René Block Well, there was one exhibition in a stable at the van der Grinten brothers' farm-it was called a 'stable exhibition'. I did not see this exhibition, but when Beuys was appointed a professor at Dusseldorf Academy in 1961, the local museum in Kleve organised an exhibition of his work. It was the first exhibition that I saw of his drawings and small objects. That was very impressive to... The rest of this article is available to subscribers of Eyeline

Left to right: René Block, Eugena Carchaslo, Nicholas Zurbrugg.

Left to right: René Block, Eugena Carchaslo, Nicholas Zurbrugg.

Joseph Bauys, Ausfagan (Sweeping Out)

Joseph Bauys, Ausfagan (Sweeping Out), 1972. Performance Sculpture. Courtesy Rene Block.