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Saturday, March 7, 2026 |
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| Marianna Simnett transforms the Secession into a visceral "Circus" |
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Marianna Simnett, Faint with Light, 2016, installation view Circus, Secession 2026. Courtesy of the artist and Société, Berlin. Photo Sophie Pölzl.
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VIENNA.- At the Secession, Marianna Simnett presents Circus, a multimedia exhibition comprising light, sound, and sculptural works that draw on her Yugoslav heritage. Personal references, including a work that was inspired by her Jewish-Croatian grandfathers experience during the Holocaust, intersect with nods to folkloric bogeywomen, who may interchangeably figure as threat or ally, and the traditional Balkan skirt that stages the delicate play of revealing and concealing intimate body parts. The shows Circus theme manifests itself in a variety of ways throughout the presentation: in the maniacal spinning of a skirt overhead, alluding to a circus tent; in a stage for a performance; in the sound of torturous laughter; or in dazzling lights illuminating a darkened space.
Simnetts practice consistently engages with intense corporeal states urinating, fainting, the sensation of being tickled which she taps into in an investigation of pleasure and pain. Having grown up in Great Britain as the daughter of a Croatian mother during the Yugoslav Wars, the artist remembers a recurring fantasy of a urinating figure resembling a folkloric female character who lifts her skirt to expose her genitalia to ward off evil spirits. Translated into neon lighting, this figure oscillates between provocation and defence, between abjection and agency. Neon does not merely illuminate; it intrudes. It screams, demands attention, and collapses distance. Building on the legacy of Bruce Naumans neon works, light in Simnetts Fountain (2026) becomes a body in its own right one that addresses, agitates, and physically affects the viewer.
In Catherine Wheel (2026), an illuminated blue skirt spins above the viewers head, synchronized with the artists uncontrollable laughter. The sound originates from a four-hour tickling session during which Simnett was pushed into an increasingly exhausted and unpredictable state. The resulting laughter dark, strained, and edged with gallows humour takes on a possessed, almost satanic quality. The skirts relentless movement becomes threatening in its sheer persistence, exerting pressure not only symbolically but bodily, as something that cannot be stopped or escaped.
The title refers both to a historical torture and execution method used in Europe until the nineteenth century and to a spectacular firework associated with fascination and childish awe. This semantic ambivalence mirrors a destabilizing experience that wavers between attraction and dread. While the corporeal experience invoked by the work borders on the intolerable, the body itself remains absent. The skirt assumes an anthropomorphic, ghostlike presence, standing in for a body that is felt but not seen. This absence functions as a repudiation of the representational regimes that historically framed the female body particularly in states of so-called hysteria as a spectacle of loss of control. Instead of showing the body in crisis, Simnett abstracts it, while activating the viewer on a visceral level.
The same strategy is also crucial to Faint with Light (2016). For this work, the artist made herself faint four consecutive times through hyperventilation before a paramedic intervened after she had a seizure. Monumental LED lights pulse in synchrony with her breathing, rising and falling alongside her repeated collapse and revival. The result is a blinding, overwhelming experience that is brutal in its intensity disorienting, almost orgasmic, and unmistakably primal.
The work resonates with the story of Simnetts Jewish grandfather, who survived the Holocaust. After he had escaped during transportation between different concentration camps, he fainted when he was about to be shot and thus was believed to be dead. At the same time, the work confronts a long visual and medical history in which womens fainting spells were systematically medicalized: diagnosed as nervous weakness or hysteria, photographed, classified, and scrutinized as evidence of supposed physical and mental instability. The fainting female body became an object of control and eroticized passivity. This was not incidental but a visualization of deeply entrenched power asymmetries.
Simnett revisits fainting as a motif not to reproduce these images, but to dismantle them. By absenting the body while intensifying its physiological effects through light, sound, and rhythm, she stages exhaustion and loss of control as an active, deliberate strategy. Fainting is no longer something to be looked at, but something that destabilizes the act of looking itself. The work asks insistently: Who is falling? Who is watching? And who bears responsibility for holding or letting go?
Drawing on personal experience and collective cultural memories, Simnetts works embrace the surreal not as an escape from reality, but as a method of transformation. Fantasy, play, and excess function here as tools for renegotiating agency in the aftermath of trauma. Rather than narrating trauma directly, the exhibition articulates it as a bodily condition structured by repetition, anticipation, and sensory overload something that is not resolved but continuously reactivated and reworked.
Marianna Simnett was born in London, UK, in 1986 and lives in New York, USA, and Berlin, Germany.
Curated by Bettina Spörr
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