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Saturday, November 16, 2024 |
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mumok opens "Avant-Garde and Liberation: Contemporary Art and Decolonial Modernism" |
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Exhibition view: Avant-Garde and Liberation. Contemporary Art and Decolonial Modernism, June 7, to September 22, 2024. Vivan Sundaram, One and the Many, 2024. Photo: Georg Petermichl / mumok.
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VIENNA.- The exhibition Avant-Garde and Liberation highlights the significance of global modernism for contemporary art. It raises questions of the political circumstances that move contemporary artists to resort to those non-European avant-gardes that formed as a counterpart of the dominant Western modernism from the 1920s to the 1970s. What are the potentials artists see in the ties to decolonial avant-gardes in Africa, Asia, and the Black Atlantic region, to take a stand against current forms of racism, fundamentalism, or neocolonialism? Which artistic methods are employed when addressing subjects such as the encroachment on personal liberties and social cohesion by drawing on seminal anticolonial and antiracist positions of the early to mid-twentieth century?
Dealing with current crisis phenomena by referencing artistic, literary, and activist avant-gardes of the twentieth century is an approach that can be found in various regions and cultural contexts. In reaction to the racism and killing of Black people by the police in the United States, African American artists like Fahamu Pecou and Cauleen Smith recall emancipatory forms of expression that emerged during the Civil Rights Movement. They hark back to the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s as the first manifestation of Black modernism or the activist and aesthetic legacy of revolutionary movements like Black Power in the 1960s.
In light of neocolonial economies, African artists reference photographers and musician-activists whose works stand for the liberation of African post-war societies. Serge Attukwei Clottey and Moffat Takadiwa should be named as examples. North African artists like Yto Barrada and Mohamed Bourouissa quote pioneers of the Arabic modernism of the 1950s and 60s or update the writings of anticolonial authors like Frantz Fanon.
In European societies marked by migrant crises and neofascisms, artists like Mathieu Kleyebe Abonnenc and patricia kaersenhout reconstruct anticolonial film aesthetics and feminist contributions to the Négritude movement. Indian artists, such as Atul Dodiya and Vivan Sundaram, react to the Hindu nationalist erosion of secular democracy with recourse to cosmopolitan projects of Rabindranath Tagore or works by sculptor Ramkinkar Baij from the time of the independence movement.
Showcasing several works by more than twenty-four artists from South Asia, Africa, Europe, and America, Avant-Garde and Liberation offers a glimpse of global modernism through the prism of their pertinence for contemporary art. In the complex tangle of past and present, the exhibition reflects on questions of temporality as well as the possibility of engaging with old and new liberation movements.
Ultimately, the global network of historical references allows for a necessary revision of the concept of Avant-Garde, which is still dominated by its European interpretation. In addition to its political dimension, the exhibition also pays homage to those contemporary artists who recall marginalized avant-gardes beyond the Eurocentric notion of modern art.
Artists: Mathieu Kleyebe Abonnenc, Omar Ba, Radcliffe Bailey, Yto Barrada, Mohamed Bourouissa, Diedrick Brackens, Serge Attukwei Clottey, william cordova, Atul Dodiya, Robert Gabris, Jojo Gronostay, Leslie Hewitt, Iman Issa, Janine Jembere, patricia kaersenhout, Belinda Kazeem-Kamiński, Zoe Leonard, Vincent Meessen, The Otolith Group, Fahamu Pecou, Cauleen Smith, Maud Sulter, Vivan Sundaram, Moffat Takadiwa
Curated by Christian Kravagna, co-curated by Matthias Michalka.
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