John Akomfrah
Maja Bajevic
Andrea Bowers
Libia Castro
Ólafur Ólafsson
Phil Collins
Jeremy Deller
Olga Egorova
Natalya Pershina
Chto Delat
Gardar Eide Einarsson
Jihan El-Tahri
Matias Faldbakken
Rainer Ganahl
Sharon Hayes
Marianne Heier
Susan Hiller
Glenn Ligon
Jumana Manna
Sille Storihle
Aleksandra Mir
Pussy Riot
Slavs and Tatars
Superflex
Rirkrit Tiravanija
Ai Weiwei
Maja Bajevic
The exhibition features works by artists who express explicit and personal struggles for freedom. Each of these struggles is distinctive. What unifies the nearly 130 works of art in the exhibition is their focus on the individual's aspirations for freedom and a desire for community and solidarity. This is the latest of the National Museum's five bicentennial 1814 exhibitions. Some of the contributors highlight problems, whereas others express positive perspectives and dreams of greater diversity.
curated by Andrea Kroksnes
Ai Weiwei gives authorities the finger in Study of Perspective, Susan Hiller collects one hundred protest and freedom songs in Die Gedanken sind frei, Marianne Heier smashes a Moelven module in the installation Dear Friends and Rirkrit Tiravanija makes sausages filled with shredded copies of Thailand’s constitution in Freedom cannot be simulated. These are among the works the public will encounter in the international group exhibition “Take Liberty!”, which is the latest of the National Museum’s five bicentennial 1814 exhibitions.
Personal struggle for freedom
The exhibition “Take Liberty!” features works by artists who express explicit and personal struggles for freedom. Each of these struggles is distinctive. What unifies the nearly 130 works of art in the exhibition is their focus on the individual’s aspirations for freedom and a desire for community and solidarity.
China’s Ai Weiwei is one of the artists in the exhibition. Using social media as artistic practice his art and ideas have reached far outside the borders of his country. Chinese authorities have responded by shutting down his blogs in 2009: “[…] I am unable to tolerate plainclothes officers secretly trailing me and threatening my safety. You don’t understand human rights, but you ought to have heard of the constitution, right?”
The ideals from 1814
The exhibition reflects on, interprets and comments the philosophical and political ideals from 1814 in a contemporary perspective. Many of the exhibited works relate to issues around the freedom of expression. The artists are concerned about the opportunities and the perils of expressing oneself in a world which continues to be plagued by systematic violations of human rights.
Some of the contributors highlight problems, whereas others express positive perspectives and dreams of greater diversity. The revolutionary spirit we have seen in the numerous popular uprisings round the world in the past few years is also perceptible in many of the exhibition’s works.
Not a single narrative
Our present, which the exhibition essentially draws on, is manifold, colourful, chaotic, fragmented and heterogeneous. The exhibition does not attempt to articulate a coherent story – it reflects the diversity of society.
Internationally renowned
Over 20 artists and artist groups are represented in the exhibition, including John Akomfrah, Maja Bajevic, Andrea Bowers, Libia Castro & Ólafur Ólafsson, Phil Collins, Jeremy Deller, Olga Egorova and Natalya Pershina (Chto Delat), Gardar Eide Einarsson, Jihan El-Tahri, Matias Faldbakken, Rainer Ganahl, Sharon Hayes, Marianne Heier, Susan Hiller, Glenn Ligon, Jumana Manna and Sille Storihle, Aleksandra Mir, Pussy Riot, Slavs and Tatars, Superflex, Rirkrit Tiravanija and Ai Weiwei. Theinstallation by Maja Bajevic is on display at the National Museum – Architecture.
Andrea Kroksnes is the exhibition’s curator. “Take Liberty!” will run at the Museum of Contemporary Art in the period 11 April–10 August 2014.
Image: SUPERFLEX, Freedom of Speech Contract, 2010
Opening: Thursday 10 April, 18h
The Museum of Contemporary Art
Bankplassen 4 - Oslo
Opening hours
Tuesday 11.00–17.00
Wednesday 11.00–17.00
Thursday 11.00–19.00
Friday 11.00–17.00
Saturday 12.00–17.00
Sunday 12.00–17.00
Monday closed