“Beware of the Holy Whore: Edvard Munch, Lene Berg and the Dilemma of Emancipation”
Galleria di Piazza San Marco
San Marco 71/c
30124 Venezia
‘Beware of the Holy Whore: Edvard Munch, Lene Berg and the Dilemma of Emancipation’ is a project organised by the Office for Contemporary Art Norway (OCA) and Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa in Venice, as the official Norwegian representation at the 55th International Art Exhibition, La Biennale di Venezia in 2013. The exhibition, which includes a series of rarely exhibited works by Edvard Munch in addition to a newly commissioned film by Lene Berg, revolves around emancipation as an issue always vexed with contradiction – between the realm of freedom and the consequences of the isolation that often accompany the pursue of a qualitatively different, ‘alternative’ life. In his Essay on Liberation, Herbert Marcuse notes that the striving toward a ‘new sensibility’ involves a psychedelic, narcotic release from the rationality of an established system, as well as from the logic that attempts to change that system. Such new sensibility, which resides in the gap between the existing order and true liberation, might lead to a radical transformation – and in this shift art functions as a technique through which to reconstruct reality from its illusion, its imitation, its harmony, towards a matter not yet given, still to be realised.
The impulse to operate in the margins – on the outside trying to break in or on the inside redefining the context – is one of the key driving forces in the history of art, and is also at the centre of ‘Beware of the Holy Whore: Edvard Munch, Lene Berg and the Dilemma of Emancipation’. The exhibition, curated by Marta Kuzma, Director, OCA, Angela Vettese, President, Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa and Pablo Lafuente, Associate Curator, OCA, will bring together rarely exhibited works from the collection of the Munch Museum in Oslo with Lene Berg’s new film Ung Løs Gris (Dirty Young Loose, 2013) in order to explore the relationship between art, its social context and changing gender relationships, both in the age of emancipation in which Munch lived and today.
At the beginning of the 20th century, sexual norms and traditional gender roles were questioned amid new psychological theories of sex and politics and a struggle for women’s equality. Challenged by such developments, Munch faced the alienation that characterised the Christiania Bohemia, a society bidding for emancipation but trapped in ‘reality’, struggling between two options: assimilating shared values, or going beyond them in order to construct a new frame for perception. Munch’s emphatic treatment of these themes from 1902 to 1908, before entering the asylum, reflected an internal ambiguity and anguish. Munch described this period as an ‘eternal civil war’, after which his work moved to a more distanced treatment of subjects, in social caricatures in which he offers an ironic critique of an increasingly capitalist and permissive society. In Social Studies, Cause and Effect (1910), made shortly after, Munch also reflected upon the conditions of artistic production and its reception, via patronage, sales, criticism and public opinion, opening new dimensions for his work, from a psychological perspective into social and historical realms.
These issues are echoed in Lene Berg’s Dirty Young Loose (2013), a film that concentrates on three stereotypical characters who are interrogated about their roles as either victims or perpetrators in a complex situation. The film explores the interpretation of human behaviour based on preconceived concepts and established norms. Just like the exhibition as a whole, the film presents the deconstruction of an original scene which functions as a catalyst for a revision of the politics of liberation, of gender struggle and of internal conflict – the dilemma of emancipation.
Additional Events:
‘A Discussion with Peter Watkins and a Screening of Edvard Munch (1973)’
Edvard Munch is considered by Watkins as his most personal film. The work dramatises three decades of the life of the artist in the form of a docudrama that conveys Munch’s subjective vision about tragic family events, difficulties in his first sexual relationships, and opposition from the conservative forces in Christiania (Oslo) following his engagement with its bohemian circle in the mid-1880s. The film concentrates on Munch’s personal reactions to these events, enfolds them in the social and historical reality of the time, and shows how they directly affected the development of his style as a painter.
In parallel to his work as a filmmaker, Peter Watkins analysed and challenged for over four decades the widely accepted escalation of the standardised pictorial and narrative form of Hollywood within all forms of contemporary audiovisual communication, including modern internet technology. The artist Edvard Munch is often referred to as a ‘modern’ artist, but – Watkins asks – how are we to define ‘modernism’ in the broadest sense, in a world that idolises manipulative audiovisual forms which encourage mass consumerism, political passivity, and escalating environmental disaster?
For press inquiries, please contact Maria Moseng, OCA’s Press Officer on maria.moseng@oca.no. For Italian press, please contact Giorgia Gallina at Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa’s press office on press@bevilacqualamasa.it.
‘Beware of the Holy Whore: Edvard Munch and the Dilemma of Emancipation’ will take place from 31 May to 22 September 2013 at Galleria di Piazza San Marco of Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa. This exhibition was made possible by generous loans from the Munch Museum, Oslo, Norway and with the additional support of Fritt Ord – the Freedom of Expression Foundation, Oslo. Lene Berg’s film is produced by Helga Fjordholm, Studio Fjordholm AS, and made possible with the additional support of NFI, the Norwegian Film Institute/Åse Meyer, Norsk Kulturråd/Arts Council Norway, Fond for Lyd og Bilde/Audio and Visual Fund, Norwegian Visual Artists Remuneration Fund.
Unattained Landscape / Paesaggio Incompiuto
May 29 - Oct 20, 2013
The exhibition will explore contemporary Japanese art, covering the fields of visual arts, performance, video, sound, graphics and design.
“Unattained Landscape / Paesaggio Incompiuto”
Palazzetto Tito
Dorsoduro 2826
30123 Venezia
In conjunction with the opening of the 55th Art Biennale, Palazzetto Tito will host “UNATTAINED LANDSCAPE / PAESAGGIO INCOMPIUTO”, an exhibition organised by the Japan Foundation in collaboration with Bevilacqua La Masa and curated by Didier Fiuza Faustino, Akiko Miyake and Angela Vettese, together with Sumi Hayashi and Sachiko Namba.
The exhibition will explore contemporary Japanese art, covering the fields of visual arts, performance, sound, graphics and design, video and literature. Rather than trying to capture national identity, the project will be structured around a possible idea of national identity. The event will thus pose a wide range of questions.
Can a common cultural territory alone create a sense of identity? What is a common cultural territory? The answer may not always be the same: it may be an open production, an exhibition in a perpetual state of change, it may be a way of underlining the void… and at the same time of authorising the visitor to trace the outlines of his/her own territory. From June to October, the space in Palazzetto Tito will host a wide range of artists, working with various different media.
On the ground floor there will be space for sounds with the works of five artists (selected by Jim O’Rourke) as well as 12 literary texts (chosen by David Peace). The central hall will be transformed into a screening theatre, with six films chosen once again by Jim O’Rourke featuring the works of various artists, such as Marina Abramovic, Tacita Dean, Maurizio Cattelan, Rirkrit Tiravanija and Cerith Wyn Evans. Each of the four rooms, on the other hand, will host the works of one of the four following artists: Meiro Koizumi, Simon Fujiwara, Tomoko Yoneda and Shuji Terayama.