Francis Alÿs
Ibon Aramberri
Marcel Broodthaers
Joan Brossa
Maurizio Cattelan
Wim Delvoye
Christian Jancowsky
Jeff Koons
Zbigniew Libera
Javier Longobardo
Rogelio López Cuenca
Piero Manzoni
Juan Luis Moraza
Bruce Nauman
Antonio Ortega
Liliana Porter
Tere Recarens
An exhibition on the subject of irony, selected by Ferran Barenblit and containing over 30 works by different artists. Most of the pieces have been produced during the last couple of years, but the curator has included items from the sixties in order to show the context in which irony appears in the way we understand it today.
The Joan Miró Foundation is presenting an
exhibition on the subject of irony, selected by Ferran
Barenblit and containing over 30 works by different
artists. Most of the pieces have been produced
during the last couple of years, but the curator has
included items from the sixties in order to show the
context in which irony appears in the way we
understand it today.
The exhibition consists of video projections,
installations, photographs and sculptures by
Francis Alÿs, Ibon Aramberri, Marcel Broodthaers,
Joan Brossa, Maurizio Cattelan, Wim Delvoye,
Christian Jancowsky, Jeff Koons, Zbigniew Libera,
Javier Longobardo, Rogelio López Cuenca, Piero
Manzoni, Juan Luis Moraza, Bruce Nauman, Antonio
Ortega, Liliana Porter and Tere Recarens. All have
very different discourses and deal with different
subjects, but the one thing they have in common is
the use of irony in their work.
Studies of the visual arts have often ignored works
that use irony as a resource. Nevertheless, in the
last forty years, art has exploited laughter as a very
effective means of expression that has the public on
its side and requires their involvement - and this
participation is one of the factors that can turn
humour into irony.
Although there are examples throughout the history
of art of artists who have employed it as a resource,
the presence of irony in the visual arts was
consolidated in the sixties with the post-modernist
theories that questioned the idea of single, stable
meanings; irony therefore constitutes an
exceptional critical mechanism on account of the
large number of meanings it can generate.
Recognising the presence of irony is a complex act
in which both author and receiver participate. It is a
field mined with misunderstandings and
contradictions, since there is no guarantee that the
receiver will understand the original intention.
Consequently, it is always an unfinished process
because of the multiple, open-ended
interpretations. The viewer is obliged to think, with
the result that the piece is constantly being
produced. But, then, isn’t thinking the purpose of
art?
The exhibition, organised by the Joan Miró
Foundation, will transfer to the Koldo Mitxelena
Kulturunea in San Sebastián from 4 December
2001 to 2 February 2002.
Opening hours
Tuesdays to Saturdays
10.00 - 19.00 (October-June)
10.00 - 20.00 (July-September)
Thursdays 10.00 - 21.30
Sundays and public holidays 10.00 - 14.30
Mondays (except public holidays) Closed
Fundació Joan Miró
Parc de Montjuïc, s/n - 08038 Barcelona
Tel. (34) 934.439.470 Fax. (34) 933.298.609