Victoria & Albert Museum
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Cromwell Road
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Che Guevara
dal 6/6/2006 al 27/8/2006

Segnalato da

Victoria & Albert Museum


approfondimenti

Alberto Korda
Trisha Ziff



 
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6/6/2006

Che Guevara

Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Revolutionary and icon. The famous portrait of Ernesto Che' Guevara, Guerrillo Heroico, photographed by Alberto Korda in 1960, is the most reproduced image in the history of photography. This exhibition will focus on the history and legacy of that single image over the past 45 years bringing together photography, posters, films, fine art and clothing from more than 30 countries. Curated by Trisha Ziff


comunicato stampa

Revolutionary and icon

Curated by Trisha Ziff

The portrait of Ernesto 'Che’ Guevara, Heroic Guerrilla, is the most reproduced image in the history of photography. Taken in 1960, at the highpoint of the Cuban revolution, it can be seen on posters and T-shirts and souvenirs all over the world.

Guevara was born in Argentina in 1928. Turning to radical Marxist politics when he saw the widespread inequality in Latin America, he joined Fidel Castro’s movement to overthrow the Cuban government. He then continued his own campaign in the Congo and later Bolivia, where he was captured and killed in 1967 as a result of a covert CIA operation.

Although there is debate about the true nature of Che’s activities, he remains the most charismatic revolutionary leader of modern times. Korda’s famous photograph first deified Che and then turned him into an icon of radical chic. Its story - a complex mesh of conflicting narratives - has given Heroic Guerrilla a life of its own, an enduring fascination independent from Che himself.

"The portrait of Ernesto 'Che' Guevara, Guerrillero Heroico, photographed by Alberto Di'az Korda on March 5, 1960, is considered to be the most reproduced image in the history of photography. Whether this claim can be substantiated or not, Korda's Che is nonetheless a unique image. It has come to symbolise anti-establishment, radical thought and action.

That Che Guevara himself was young and charismatic and brutally murdered with the support of the CIA at only thirty-nine years of age inevitably contributes to the mystique. Guerrillero Heroico is a statuesque image taken from below. It derives from a visual language of mythologised heroes harking back to an era of socialist realism, yet it also references a classical, even Christ-like demeanour.

This exhibition brings together photography, posters, film, fine art, clothing and artefacts from more than thirty countries. The image moves from heroic guerrilla and pop celebrity to radical chic, spoof and kitsch. The vast majority of the aesthetic treatments of Korda's image derive from the Pop idiom of the 60s. While traditional art relishes ambiguity, introspection and chance, the aesthetic of Pop art was by definition a rejection of traditional art and figuration. Pop's egalitarian, "in your face" presentations are a perfect corollary for Che's anti-establishment values.

This portrait of Che is an ideal abstraction transformed into a symbol that both resists subtle interpretation and is infinitely malleable. It has moved into the realm of caricature and parody at the same time it is used as political commentary on issues as diverse as the world debt, anti-Americanism, Latin-American identity, and the rights of gays and indigenous peoples.

Rashomonesque in its multiple appearances, Guerrillero Heroico has remained fluid yet buoyant. Its meaning is always clear even to those who know little about the man himself."

Trisha Ziff

Trisha Ziff is originally from England and today lives in Mexico City where she became a citizen in 2003. Trisha has curated many international shows including: The Ballad of Katriot Rexhepi, Mary Kelly; Hidden Truths: Bloody Sunday 1972; and Distant Relations: Chicano Irish and Mexican Art Between Worlds Contemporary Mexican Photography.
Trisha has edited a number of books, as well as contributing to many anthologies and magazines.
Trisha is a Guggenheim scholar and is currently completing her PhD at the Metropolitan University of London.

Image information: Bolivian Diary, Ernesto Che Guevara, Cuba, 1968 (c) Instituto del Libro La Habana

This exhibition was organised by UCR/ California Museum of Photography.
It was made possible with additional support from Centro de la imagen, Mexico City, the Anglo Mexican Foundation and Zonezero.com

A programme of events and activities has been organised to complement the exhibition. Suitable for visitors of all ages and appealing to those with general and specific interests, the programme includes Friday Late Cuba, a night of contemporary Cuban culture featuring live performance art, music, films and workshops; a critical debate; and talks and events for educators, young people and families

All events are free unless stated otherwise
For more information or to book call + 44 (0)20 7942 2211 or email bookings.office@vam.ac.uk

Victoria & Albert Museum
Cromwell Road London SW7
Hours: 10.00-17.45 daily, 10.00-22.00 Wednesdays and last Friday of the month
Exhibition closes five minutes before Museum. Last entry 17.20 (last ticket sold 17.15). Late opening last entry 21.20 (last ticket sold 21.15)
Admission £5, Concessions £4, Family tickets: £14 (2 adults, 2 12-17 yr olds); £8 (1
adult, 2 12-17 yr olds)

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