'Sweet Violence' covers four decades of Ivekovic's audacious work as feminist and activist, including over 100 works and presenting the full range of the artist's practice in all mediums from conceptual photomontage to video, social sculpture, performance and drawing. The exhibition makes a major contribution to the reevaluation of significant women artists and the discursive relationship between art and social change in the contemporary world.
The Museum of Modern Art presents Sanja Iveković: Sweet
Violence, the first retrospective in the United States of the artist’s work, from December 18, 2011,
to March 26, 2012.
The exhibition covers four decades of Iveković’s audacious work as feminist,
activist, and video and performance pioneer. Iveković (b. 1949, Zagreb) came of age in the post–
1968 period, at a time when artists broke free from mainstream institutional settings, laying ground
for a form of opposition to official culture. In the 1970s Iveković probed the persuasive qualities of
mass media and its identity-forging potential, and after 1990—with the fall of the Berlin Wall, the
disintegration of Yugoslavia, and the birth of a new nation—she focused on the transformation of
reality from communist to post-communist political systems. Iveković’s work offers a view into the
politics of power, gender roles, and the paradoxes inherent in society’s collective memory.
The
exhibition is organized by Roxana Marcoci, Curator, Department of Photography, The Museum of
Modern Art.
The exhibition includes over 100 works, presenting the full range of the artist’s practice in all
mediums—from conceptual photomontage to video, social sculpture, performance, and drawing. The
artist’s monumental sculptural installation Lady Rosa of Luxembourg (2001) will be featured in The
Donald B. and Catherine C. Marron Atrium on the second floor. The works presented in the
exhibition’s third-floor galleries include a group of single-channel videos that the Museum has
recently acquired, including Sweet Violence (1974), Instructions No. 1 (1976), Make Up – Make Down
(1978), Personal Cuts (1982), Practice Makes a Master (1982), and General Alert (Soap Opera)
(1995), as well as a selection of photomontages from Iveković’s celebrated series Double Life (1975–
76). Additionally, the artist’s performance piece Practice Makes a Master (1982) will be reenacted on
three occasions prior to the opening of the exhibition.
Sweet Violence, the work that gives this exhibition its title, is among Iveković’s first forays
into video. It addresses the corrosive effect of media culture under the state doctrine known as
the Third Way, a political experiment that took place in the 1970s, during Marshall Tito’s rule,
which was defined by an idiosyncratic mix of socialist revolution and free-market economics, all
steeped in propaganda. Iveković superimposed black bars on a television monitor and then taped
one of the daily broadcasts of Zagreb’s Economic Propaganda Program. With this simple
intervention, she visually disconnected viewers from the ―sweet violence of media seduction, an
act of voluntary distancing in examining the way images circulate in everyday life, and the
mythologies that lurk beneath their surfaces.
The exhibition also features Iveković’s celebrated series of photomontages Double Life, in
which the artist juxtaposed pictures of herself culled from her private albums with ads clipped
from the pages of women’s lifestyle magazines, such as Anna Bella, Brigitte, Duga, Elle, and
Svijet, matching the images on the basis of similarities in gesture, situation, props, and location.
All images are dated and include a note on the situation and persons portrayed, making clear that
Iveković was not simply mimicking media constructs of femininity but was, in fact, was predating
them–since most of her self-portraits were taken well before those in the ads to which they are
compared. This ―retroactive perspective sets Double Life apart from similar self-transformations
in other artists’ works at the time, and it announces the feminist shifts that have been at play in
contemporary art since the early 1970s.
Other highlights include Iveković’s piece Triangle, performed as an act of political defiance
in 1979 on the balcony of her apartment during one of Marshall Tito’s official visits to Zagreb.
During the festivities, the artist came dressed in an American T-shirt to her balcony, which
overlooked the street along which the presidential motorcade slowly advanced, and sat in a chair
with a glass of Ballantine’s whiskey, cigarettes, and some foreign books, props she selected as
―utopian signifiers of an alternative, Western society. While she read Tom Bottomore’s Elites and
Society, a 1964 sociological study of power relationships in modern society, she also pretended to
masturbate, knowing that she was being watched by an agent of the Communist secret police
atop Hotel Intercontinental across the street. The titular triangle completed itself when, 18
minutes into the performance, a policeman rang her doorbell commanding ―people and objects be
removed from the balcony. The piece is represented in the exhibition by a suite of photographs
and text.
The most memorable of Iveković’s public art projects, Lady Rosa of Luxembourg (2001), is
installed in The Donald B. and Catherine C. Marron Atrium on the second floor, with
documentation of its original public presentation and critical reception. When the artist was invited
to participate in Manifesta 2, in 1998, in Luxembourg, she proposed removing the gilded, larger-
than-life neoclassical Nike (the allegorical female figure of Victory) from the war memorial known
as Gëlle Fra (Golden Lady) in Constitution Square to the premises of a shelter for abused women.
Iveković’s proposal was deemed controversial and remained unrealized. Three years later,
however, she was invited back to rethink her proposal. It was then that she created Lady Rosa of
Luxembourg, a same-size replica of the Gëlle Fra monument featuring three critical interventions:
the new monument was dedicated to the Marxist philosopher and activist Rosa Luxemburg, who
was executed for her radical political ideas in 1919; Nike, a purely allegorical figure, denied of
historical agency, was turned into a visibly pregnant woman; and the original commemorative
plaque honoring male heroism was replaced with texts in French, German, and English, reading,
"LA RÉSISTANCE, LA JUSTICE, LA LIBERTÉ, L’INDÉPENDENCE" ; "KITSCH, KULTUR, KAPITAL,
KUNST"; and "WHORE, BITCH, MADONNA, VIRGIN. Lady Rosa of Luxembourg provoked a fierce
debate that played out in newspaper headlines and on television shows. The most violent
opposition focused not on the pregnant figure but on the plaque, which displaced the ideals of
male bravery with abusive terms regularly used to describe women.
The artist’s 18-minute performance piece Practice Makes a Master (1982), a compelling
study of the rehearsal of violence, will be reenacted by dancer Sonja Pregrad on December 12, 14,
and 15 (see below for details). A video of the performance will be presented in the third-floor
galleries.
Sanja Iveković: Sweet Violence makes a major contribution to the reevaluation of significant
women artists and the discursive relationship between art and social change in the contemporary
world. Iveković is an influential artist whose work has been featured in major international
exhibitions including Manifesta 2 (1998), Documenta 11 (2002), Documenta 12 (2007), and the 8th
Gwangju Biennale (2010), among others. Recent mid-career retrospectives of her work include Sanja
Iveković: Urgent Matters (Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, and Basis voor Actuele Kunst, Utrecht,
2009), and Sanja Iveković: Practice Makes the Master (Muzeum Sztuki, Łódź, 2009).
SPONSORSHIP:
The exhibition is made possible by MoMA’s Wallis Annenberg Fund for Innovation in Contemporary
Art through the Annenberg Foundation.
Major support is provided by The Modern Women’s Fund, established by Sarah Peter, and by The
Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.
Additional funding is provided by David Teiger, The International Council of The Museum of
Modern Art, Trust for Mutual Understanding, and The Junior Associates of The Museum of Modern
Art.
PUBLICATION:
Sanja Iveković: Sweet Violence is accompanied by a major publication that weaves together art-
historical analysis and political theory. Essays by curator Roxana Marcoci and literary critic Terry
Eagleton offer a critical examination of the neo-avant-garde in the former Yugoslavia and provide
a philosophical context for investigating urgent issues such as women’s rights, political activism,
and collaborative strategies in art. Hardcover. 192 pages. 257 illustrations. Price: $50.00.
Available at the MoMA Stores and online, and to the trade through ARTBOOK | D.A.P in the United
States and Canada.
PERFORMANCE:
Sanja Iveković’s 18-minute performance piece Practice Makes a Master (1982), a compelling study
of the rehearsal of violence, will be reenacted by dancer Sonja Pregrad on the following days:
Monday, December 12, 8:00 p.m.
Wednesday, December 14, 5:00 p.m.
Thursday, December 15, 7:00 p.m.
All performances are in Classroom B in The Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman Education and Research
Building, 4 West 54 Street. Tickets are free of charge and can be obtained starting November 12
at the lobby information desk, at the film desk, or online.
PUBLIC PROGRAM:
Sanja Iveković: Sweet Violence Panel Discussion
Monday December 12, 2011, 6:00 p.m.
The Celeste Bartos Theater, mezzanine, The Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman Education and Research
Building, 4 West 54 Street
A panel discussion is presented among scholars, curators, and artists engaging in a critical analysis of
the relationship between art and politics. Participants include Ivana Bago and Antonia Majača,
curators, Institute for Duration, Location and Variables [DeLVe], Zagreb; Charles Esche, director, Van
Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, The Netherlands; Sanja Iveković, artist, Zagreb; Bojana Pejić, art historian
and curator, Berlin; and Martha Rosler, artist, New York. Roxana Marcoci, Curator, Department of
Photography, The Museum of Modern Art, and organizer of the exhibition Sanja Iveković: Sweet
Violence, moderates the discussion. The panel will be followed by Iveković's performance Practice
Makes a Master with Sonja Pregrad, in classroom B, at 8:00 p.m.
Tickets ($10; $8 members and Corporate Members; $5 students, seniors, and staff of other
museums) can be purchased online, at the lobby information desk, at the film desk after 4:00
p.m., and at the Cullman Desk in the Education and Research Building one hour before the start of
the program.
WEBSITE:
The exhibition will be accompanied by a website that features an in-depth presentation of Lady Rosa
of Luxembourg as it was originally installed in Luxembourg in 2001 and the controversy around it.
Users will be able to zoom in on various newspaper articles and download essays written in response
to and about the piece. The site also features texts and images of a selection of works in the
exhibition. The site, www.MoMA.org/sanjaivekovic , will launch on December 18, 2011.
Image: Sanja Iveković. From the series Paper Women. 1976-77. Torn printed paper. MACBA Collection. Fundació Museu d'Art Contemporani de Barcelona. © 2011 Sanja Iveković
Press Preview: Tuesday, December 13, 2011
10:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
12:00 p.m. -- Sanja Iveković's 18-minute performance piece Practice Makes a Master (1982) will be reenacted by dancer Sonja Pregrad
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