The 21st century has introduced new arenas for self-representation. Opinions and images are rapidly exchanged in different social platforms, and gestures from our private lives are constantly put on view for all to see. Every person in the world is invited to create multiple personae that will represent him/her on the virtual platform.
The Museum’s current display features a solo exhibition by artist Ulla von Brandenburg, curated by Noam Segal and selected works from the Angel Collection of Contemporary Art, curated by Dalia Levin and Tal Bechler.
Ulla von Brandenburg’s show consists of three installations combining video and fabrics. Working in several mediums, including performance, playwriting, and poetry, Von Brandenburg draws inspiration from a wide spectrum of historical and cultural sources, such as literature, psychoanalysis, theater, photography, games, and magic. She creates stratified narratives which delve into the gap between truth and fiction, theater and a perception of reality.
Spanning works from the Angel Collection of Contemporary Art, the exhibition brings together artistic gestures which articulate small and grand actions: iconic compositions, such as the biblical scenes in Adi Nes’s photographs, archetypes of life and death, as in Vik Muniz’s work, or the story of the Binding of Isaac in Evan Holloway’s piece, alongside various instances of human behavior, such as the weeping in Muntean/Rosenblum’s work or the cigarette lighting in Matt Saunders’s piece.
The stage is habitually filled with furniture, objects and accessories, which serve as symbols, artistic means to transmit messages. Together they construct a décor that makes the drama possible. A process is thus created in which the spectator either becomes absorbed in the work or alienated from it to a voyeuristic point of view, as happens in the case of Mika Rottenberg and Tracey Snelling. Costumes and stage props are also used by Tamy Ben-Tor and Hila Lulu Lin.
Oscillating between exposure and concealment, Chiho Aoshima’s and Kent Henricksen’s works unfold mini-scenes. Gestures of aggression and domination are presented by Marcel Dzama and MK Kahne. Horror haunts Robert Longo’s cinematic scenes, whereas other gestures, such as those seen in Ofir Dor’s work, articulate social conflicts.
The works in the exhibition exemplify the ongoing dialogue between visual art and performance arts, reinforcing contemporary art’s ability to express patterns of social conduct in matter.
Participating artists: Nelly Agassi, James Aldridge, Darren Almond, David Altmejd, Chiho Aoshima, Tamy Ben-Tor, Huma Bhabha, Martin Borowski, Don Brown, Nigel Cooke, Matthew Day Jackson, Ofir Dor, Marcel Dzama, Mona Hatoum, Kent Henricksen, Evan Holloway, MK Kahne, Robert Longo, Hila Lulu Lin, Barry McGee, Matthew Monahan, Vik Muniz, Muntean/Rosenblum, Adi Nes, Philip Rantzer, Mika Rottenberg, Yehudit Sasportas, Matt Saunders, Allison Schulnik, Tracey Snelling, Ulla von Brandenburg, Kehinde Wiley.
Curators:
Ulla von Brandenburg: Noam Segal
Works from the Angel Collection of Contemporary Art: Dalia Levin and Tal Bechler
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