Jean Tinguely
Francis Alys
Gijs Assmann
Begona Munoz
Francis Picabia
Job Koelewijn
Donna Conlon
Meschac Gaba
Roger Raveel
Lucy Orta
Patrick van Caeckenbergh
Fransje Killaars
Gunter Brus
Vladimir Tatlin
James Lee Byars
Daniel Buren
James Ensor
Thomas Hirschhorn
Procession in Art
For the tenth Sonsbeek festival, entitled Grandeur, sculptural works will
be carried through the city in a procession. The exhibition 'Carried Away
– Procession in art' reveals that the phenomenon of art processions is
not an isolated one but has a historical tradition. The exhibition will be
on display to 21 September at the Arnhem Museum of Modern Art. The
exhibition features a selection of Dutch and international artists who
have organised processions, or have been influenced by processions,
political parades, carnival parades, marches, or funeral processions.
Anyone who studies art history will notice an explosion of processions at
the start of the 20th century, in the 1960s and 1970s, and from the 1990s
to today. Some art processions are in veneration, others are homages, or
express protest, criticism or questioning. For instance, the exhibition
features a film of a carnival parade in which Joseph Beuys joins the
people in solidarity to protest the high price paid for his own work by a
museum.
The exhibition also features life-sized pigs by Stephen Wilks,
which have been carried around by people and refer to George Orwell's book
Animal Farm. In contrast, Wim T. Schippers and Willem de Ridder reveal
with their 'March through Amsterdam' that they had no goal in mind other
than to organize a simple march. In addition to artists who have organised
processions themselves, there are also artists who have been inspired by
the procession and have depicted this phenomenon in videos, paintings,
drawings, or sculptures. Famous examples include James Ensor's painted
carnivelesque parade, which is a criticism of Flemish society, and Roger
Raveel's 'Painting Parade'. Finally, Thomas Hirschhorn takes the visitor
with him in 'The Procession', an installation inspired by political
funeral processions and protest demonstrations in which a fake casket is
carried around. Other artists whose work is on display include: Jean
Tinguely, Francis Alÿs, Gijs Assmann, Begoña Muñoz, Francis Picabia,
Job Koelewijn, Donna Conlon, Meschac Gaba, Roger Raveel,
Lucy Orta, Patrick van Caeckenbergh, Fransje Killaars, Yvonne Druge
- Wendel, Gunter Brus, Vladimir Tatlin, James Lee Byars and Daniel
Buren.
Arnhem Museum of Modern Art
Utrechtseweg 87 - Arnhem
Open: Tuesday - Friday 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Saturday -Sunday 11 a.m - 5 p.m.