Showing posts with label Latifa Echakhch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Latifa Echakhch. Show all posts

06/09/20

Miroslaw Balka, Marianne Berenhaut, Latifa Echakhch, Gustav Metzger @ Dvir Gallery, Brussels - ‘Lacrimae Rerum’ Homage to Gustav Metzger

‘Lacrimae Rerum’ Homage to Gustav Metzger
Miroslaw Balka, Marianne Berenhaut, Latifa Echakhch, Gustav Metzger
Dvir Gallery, Brussels
September 3 - October 24, 2020

Dvir Gallery presents ‘Lacrimae Rerum’ – homage to Gustav Metzger. The exhibition aims to show a selection of Gustav Metzger’s historical works alongside never seen before pieces by Miroslaw Balka, Marianne Berenhaut and Latifa Echakhch created especially for this exhibition.

Gustav Metzger, born in Nuremberg in 1926, revolutionized the contemporary art world by developing the concept of Auto-Destructive Art and questioning the role of art in the political discourse.
« There is no choice but to follow the path of ethics into aesthetics. »
Gustav Metzger
GUSTAV METZGER

Born to Polish-Jewish parents in Nurnberg, Gustav Metzger was evacuated to Great Britain in 1939 at the age of twelve with the help of the initiative known as the Kindertransport. As a young boy, he became aware of the atrocities of the totalitarian Nazi regime. His parents and other relatives perished in the Holocaust.

In 1959, Gustav Metzger wrote his first manifesto, titled ‘Auto-destructive Art’ and with this became the founding father of a radical new form of art. With this and his later manifestos, he showed how society could be destroyed by capitalism, but also highlighted the transformative potential of destruction; for example, the possibility for transformation of society through individual and collective action. In 1961, Gustav Metzger demonstrated the concept of ADA for the first time by vigorously spraying nylon canvasses with acid, causing them to disintegrate. This was an attack on, and even a symbolic destruction of, the system. At the same time, Gustav Metzger not only rebelled against the political system, but also against the commercial aspects of the art world. In 1977, he proposed a three-year Art Strike, which he hoped would cause a collapse and complete restructuring of the art system.

Gustav Metzger has had solo exhibitions at Serpentine Galleries, London; Tate Britain, London; Museo Jumex, Mexico City; Neuer Berliner Kunstverein, Berlin; Haus der Kunst München, Munich, Kunsthalle Basel, Basel; New Museum, New York; Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Tel Aviv and many others. Moreover, his work was shown at Documenta 13 (2012), the Venice Biennale of 2003 and the Sao Paulo Biennale of 2010.

LATIFA ECHAKHCH

Working in painting, sculpture and installations, Latifa Echakhch (El Khnansa, Morocco, 1974) chooses easily recognisable objects invested with a domestic and/or social burden, which she silences through destruction, deletion or by restoring them. This thereby deprives them of their usage value - pushing their function into oblivion - in order to free the memories attached to them. She summons memories and frees the ghosts that emerge from these objects. The work of Latifa Echakhch is simultaneously conceptual and romantic, both political and poetic.

Latifa Echakhch’s work has been presented in numerous solo exhibitions: at the Museum Haus Konstruktiv in Zurich, the Centre Pompidou in Paris, the macLYON, the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, the BPS22 in Charleroi, the Columbus Museum of Art (Ohio), the Kunsthaus Zurich, the MACBA in Barcelona, the Nouveau Musée National de Monaco, the FRAC Champagne-Ardenne in Reims, the Kunsthalle Fridericianum in Kassel, the Swiss Institute in New York, the Tate Modern in London, the Memmo Foundation in Rome; as well as group exhibitions: at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, the Musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de Paris, the Palais de Tokyo in Paris, the MoMA PS1 in New York, the Fundació Joan Miró in Barcelona, the Contemporary Arts Museum in Houston; and as part of the Istanbul Biennial, the 54th Venice Biennale, the 11th Sharjah Biennial, the Jerusalem Art Focus Biennale and the Manifesta 7 in Bolzano.

Latifa Echakhch won the Marcel Duchamp Prize in 2013 and the Zurich Art Prize in 2015. She is representing Switzerland at Venice Biennale 2022.

MIROSLAW BALKA

Miroslaw Balka was born in 1958 in Warsaw, Poland where he lives and works. Comprising installation, sculpture and video, Miroslaw Balka’s work has a bare and elegiac quality that is underlined by the careful, minimalist placement of objects, as well as the gaps and pauses between them. Miroslaw Balka’s work deals with both personal and collective memories, especially as they relate to his Catholic upbringing and the collective experience of Poland’s fractured history. Through this investigation of domestic memories and public catastrophe, he explores how subjective traumas are translated into collective histories and vice versa. His materials are simple, everyday objects and things, but also powerfully resonant of ritual, hidden memories and the history of Nazi occupation in Poland.

Miroslaw Balka has participated in major exhibitions worldwide including: Venice Biennale (1990, 2003, 2005, 2013; representing Poland in 1993), documenta IX, Kassel (1992), Sydney Biennale (1992, 2006), The Carnegie International, Pittsburgh (1995), Sao Paulo Biennale (1998), Liverpool Biennial (1999), Santa Fe Biennale (2006). In 2009 he presented the special project How It Is for the Unilever Series, Turbine Hall, Tate Modern, London. He is the author of the Memorial to the Victims of the Estonia Ferry Disaster in Stockholm (1997), and numerous spatial works including AUSCHWITZWIELICZKA, Cracow (2010), and HEAL, University of California, San Francisco (2009).

Retrospectives of his work took place in such institutions as Pirelli Hangar Bicocca in Milan, Museum of Art in Lodz and in the Museum Morsbroich in Leverkusen. Miroslaw Balka’s works are in numerous institutional collections including: Tate Modern, London; Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven; MOCA, Los Angeles; SFMOMA, San Francisco; MOMA, New York; Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC; The Art Institute of Chicago; The Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh; Museu Serralves, Porto; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Kiasma, Helsinki; Kröller-Müller, Otterlo; EMST The National Museum of Art, Athens; The National Museum of Art, Osaka; The Israel Museum, Jerusalem; Tel Aviv Museum of Art; Collection Lambert, Avignon; Middelheimmuseum, Antwerp; Fundación Botín, Santander; Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb. In Poland his works are in the collections of: Muzeum Sztuki, Lodz; Centre of Contemporary Art, Warsaw; Zacheta – National Gallery of Art, Warsaw; Museum of Modern Art, Warsaw; The National Museum, Wroclaw; MOCAK, Cracow; Labirynt, Lublin; Arsenał, Bialystok.

MARIANNE BERENHAUT

Marianne Berenhaut, Belgian-born (1934) artist has been gathering, curating, transforming objects found in her immediate surrounding creating powerful yet delicate sculptures and installations. Her work addresses longing, trauma, absence and memory. Through her vast body of work, spanning through 45 years, Marianne Berenhaut has created a unique visual language.

Today, Marianne Berenhaut divides her time between Brussels and London, constantly creating. Having graduated the Académie du Midi and Atelier de Moeschal in the sixties, she had various solo exhibitions in different art spaces and institutions like La Maison des Femmes (Brussels), Island Brussels, Musée juif de Belgique (Brussels), MAC’s Grand Hornu (Belgium) as well as in Isy Brachot Gallery (Brussels), and Nadja Vilenne Gallery (Liège).

DVIR GALLERY
Rue de Fiennes 85, Brussels 1070

08/12/13

Decorum. Tapis et tapisseries d'artistes, MAM, Musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de Paris

Decorum. Tapis et tapisseries d’artistes 
Musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de Paris 
Jusqu'au 9 février 2014

Caroline Achaintre
Caroline Achaintre
Moustache-Eagle, 2008
Courtesy Saatchi Gallery, London
© Caroline Achaintre

Le Musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de Paris met l’art textile en lumière avec l'exposition Decorum qui présente plus d’une centaine de tapis et de tapisseries signés par des artistes modernes (Francis Bacon, Fernand Léger, Pablo Picasso) et contemporains : Caroline Achaintre, Latifa Echakhch, Elsi Giauque, Helen Frances Gregor, Sheila Hicks, Nathalie Du Pasquier, Maryn Varbanov, Pae White...

Latifa Echakhch
Latifa Echakhch
Frames (rouge, bleu, vert), 2009
Installation au sol de trois contours de tapis
123 x 71 cm chacun
Courtesy de l’artiste et galerie Kamel Mennour, Paris
© Latifa Echakhch.
Photo : Fabrice Seixas

Decorum permet de découvrir les oeuvres tissées, souvent insoupçonnées, d’artistes majeurs et le travail d’artistes injustement méconnus (Guidette Carbonell). Des pièces anonymes de différentes époques et régions sont également exposées afin de déceler des influences et d’engager des confrontations. 

Objets à la fois visuels et tactiles, esthétiques et fonctionnels, facilement transportables (Le Corbusier qualifiait ses tapisseries de « Muralnomad »), tapis et tapisseries transcendent les habituelles frontières des arts décoratifs et du design. 

Elsi Giauque
Elsi Giauque
Élément spatial, 1979
Tapisserie tridimensionnelle, lin, soie, laine, métal
20 cadres 90 × 95 × 0,5 cm (chaque)
Mudac – musée de design et des arts appliqués contemporains, Lausanne
Droits réservés. Photo : 1m3 – Mathilde Agius 

Helen Frances Gregor
Helen Frances Gregor
Totem n°5, 1976
Tapisserie de basse-lice en laine
250 x 180 x 25 cm
Fondation Toms Pauli, Lausanne
© Helen Frances Gregor
Photo: Fibbi-Aeppli, Grandson

Jusqu’à la fin du XIXème siècle, les peintres se limitaient au dessin du carton destiné à être tissé ou à la représentation de tapis orientaux dans leurs tableaux (Lotto, Holbein, Delacroix). Au cours du XXème siècle, les avant-gardes artistiques européennes révolutionnent l’esthétique et la technique de l’art textile. Les artistes tissent eux-mêmes leurs tapis en faisant référence à des pièces anciennes ou en utilisant des motifs ethniques et géométriques. 

Souvent porteurs d’un message politique ou féministe à partir des années 1960, tapis et tapisseries suscitent un regain d’intérêt sensible depuis les années 2000. De jeunes artistes contemporains comme Caroline Achaintre ou Pae White produisent des pièces tissées originales qui intègrent tradition, modernité ou influences extra-occidentales et expérimentent de nouvelles techniques, comme le tissage numérique. 

Pae White
Pae White 
Berlin B, 2012 
Tapisserie coton, polyester et toile trevira 
290 x 440 cm 
Courtesy de l’artiste et Neugerriemschneider, Berlin 
Photo : Jens Ziehe, Berlin 
© Pae White 

L’exposition va ainsi à l’encontre des idées reçues présentant la tapisserie comme un art mineur ou anachronique. Elle permet par ailleurs de renouer avec une histoire peu connue du musée qui possédait un département Art et Création Textile dans les années 1980. 

Sheila Hicks
Sheila Hicks
Pteras Swoop, 2011
Tissage en coton et plumes
38 × 35 cm
Courtesy de l’artiste et Sikkema Jenkins & Co, New York
Image courtesy of Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York
© Sheila Hicks

Nathalie Du Pasquier
Nathalie Du Pasquier
Equador, 1986
Tapis noué en laine sur trame de lin et chaîne de coton
(éditions Textiles Palmisano)
200 x 200 cm
Coll. particulière, Milan / Courtesy de l’artiste
Photo : Ilvio Gallo
© Nathalie Du Pasquier

Maryn Varbanov
Maryn Varbanov (atelier Sofia)
Arythmie, 1972
Tapisserie de basse-lice en laine
165 × 198 cm
Courtesy musée Jean-Lurçat et de la tapisserie contemporaine, Angers
Cliché musées d’Angers, Pierre David
© Maryn Varbanov

L’artiste londonien Marc Camille Chaimowicz, directeur artistique invité, a conçu la scénographie inédite de l’exposition en collaboration avec l’architecte Christine Ilex Beinemeier. Jean-Philippe Antoine, professeur d’esthétique, propose une programmation de « musique d’ameublement », diffusée en fond sonore dans l’exposition.

Un catalogue, largement illustré et co-édité par Skira Flammarion est publié à cette occasion.

Commissaire de l’exposition : Anne Dressen 

Une exposition de l’ARC

Musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de Paris
11 av. du Président Wilson - Paris 16e
Site internet du musée : www.mam.paris.fr