The art of Gregor Hildebrandt (born 1974) can best be described by the concept of conceptual image creation, although this too opens up a conceptual pigeonhole in which the artist is difficult to categorize.
Since 1999, Gregor Hildebrandt has been working with cassette tape and since 2003 with video tape as his preferred material. In closely adjacent strips, canvases are completely or partially covered, paper works and sculptures are created, or even entire house walls and rooms are draped. The coated surface of the tapes creates a reflection of light and the surrounding space, which never makes the image appear the same. The austerity of Hildebrandt's works only seemingly evokes associations with formal reductions known since the 1960s. The minimal in Hildebrandt's work never appears value-free, but is instead poetically charged. In the painting The Carny N.C. (San Michele) (274 x 447 cm, 2004), for example, the silhouette of the cemetery island San Michele of Venice is outlined in the lower third. While in this area the raw canvas is visible and the island with surrounding water is imagined, Hildebrandt has covered the upper part of the sky completely with cassette tape. The tape here, as always in the works of Gregor Hildebrandt, is not merely a material, but also a carrier of meaning insofar as the tapes are always carriers of music. In this case, it is the song The Carny by the Australian singer Nick Cave. The immateriality of the music intertwines in its meaning with the subject of the canvas painting. The conceptual in Hildebrandt's work is evident precisely in this questioning of visibility. The idea takes the place of concrete realization, of pure illustration.
The viewer is no longer fixed on mere perception, but finds themselves challenged to reflect on the open form according to their own ideas. This individual appropriation in Hildebrandt's work, however, never leads to a dissolution of the materiality of the work, but ties it back to the form of the panel painting.