Barrie Cooke
Dorothy Cross
Richard Hamilton
Rebecca Horn
Caroline McCarthy
Vik Muniz
Kathy Prendergast
Christina Kennedy
Charlotte Bonham-Carter
An exhibition of 17 works from the IMMA Collection. The nature of the exhibition is that the final outcome of the show is largely unpredictable and partly determined by chance. However, it is likely that the display will include a wide selection of works ranging from different eras made in a variety of media. Curated by Christina Kennedy and Charlotte Bonham-Carter.
curated by Christina Kennedy and Charlotte Bonham-Carter
A new exhibition presenting a variety of fresh perspectives on the Irish Museum of
Modern Art's Collection opens to the public at IMMA on Thursday 11 September 2008.
Exquisite Corpse comprises 17 works from the Museum's Collection selected by range
of people from across the Irish and international arts world. These include renowned
Surrealism scholar Dawn Ades, award-winning writer Colm Tóibín, celebrated artist
Michael Craig-Martin and senior Tate curator Frances Morris. The resulting
exhibition features a diverse range of works, including those by Barrie Cooke,
Dorothy Cross, Richard Hamilton, Rebecca Horn, Caroline McCarthy, Vik Muniz, Kathy
Prendergast and many more.
Also known today as Consequences, the game Exquisite Corpse was invented by the
Surrealist poets in 1925 and derives its name from a phrase used by them: Le
cadavre exquis boira le vin nouveau (The exquisite corpse will drink the new wine).
This involved several participants creating a poem or drawing with the idea of the
body as a point of departure. A crucial element was that each player was unaware of
what the others had written or drawn, resulting in a sequential collage of words or
images.
The game grew out of the Surrealists' interest in developing techniques that
inspired free forms of association, unfettered by aesthetic, moral, and rational
considerations. This mechanism provided a strategy for drawing out content in a
spontaneous, unselfconscious way to allow the creative process to come to the fore,
thus broadening the range of possible meanings. One of the fascinating aspects of
the game is how, despite its apparently disparate elements, underlying connections
often materialise, and visitors can judge for themselves the extent to which this is
also the case with the IMMA show.
Traditionally the game required the arrangement to result in a human figure. In the
IMMA show the body "parts" are made up of artworks, and accompanying texts,
selected by the fourteen players. There are two points of entry to the exhibition,
corresponding to the head and foot of the cadavre exquis. The decision as to
whether the players made their selection with a particular part of the body in mind
was left to their own discretion. This freedom to respond subjectively has resulted
in an extremely open interpretation of the central theme, and so the visitor moves
through a conceptual "body" that is suggested by the artworks and the accompanying
texts.
The process of selecting the participants has been the main curatorial input by the
Museum. Eligibility relied on the participants' having some previous experience of
IMMA's Collection. The period of deliberation was kept as brief as possible, in
order to maintain the instinctive nature of the game. It was serendipitous that Dawn
Ades, renowned for her scholarship in Surrealism, was by virtue of her surname also
the first player and so was able to bring her particular expertise to bear at the
very beginning of the process. This led to her essay on Surrealism and the Outsiders
and her choice of a work by Madge Gill from the Musgrave Kinley Outsider Art
Collection at IMMA. As she mentions in her text, the Surrealists were among the
first to recognise the potency of Outsider art (created by those working outside
established art structures) and in it the freedoms that they advocated.
The paradoxical title Exquisite Corpse itself influenced diverse choices and
responses. Some works evoke the body in a visceral sense, others through abstract
means, and some both at the same time, such as From the Mechanism of Meaning, 1971,
by Shusaku Arakawa, chosen by Mick Wilson. Nicola Lees' selection is a response
involving the Ulysses inspired prints of Richard Hamilton from the Collection and a
book installation by artist Simon Popper consisting of 120 copies of his
alphabetized version of Ulysses. Artist Mark Garry's selection plays on the ruse
inherent in the game by inviting Erin Potts to choose the artwork and collaborating
with Dianne De Stefano and Potts to evolve the text. The other participants are
Gerald Barry, Aileen Corkery, Jonathan Carroll, Michael Craig-Martin, Deirdre
Horgan, Jaki Irvine, Nicola Lees, Tony Magennis, Lisa Moran, Frances Morris and Colm
Tóibín.
Commenting on the use of the Exquisite Corpse device to generate new insights into
the Collection, Christina Kennedy, Head of IMMA's Collections and the curator of the
exhibition, said: "Exquisite Corpse could be seen as an elaborate, esoteric, some
might say frivolous, historical model, yet it provides a unique methodology for a
form of experimentation and creative experience which bypasses the exhaustive
mediation of post-modernism and is a framework which allows for the possibility of
the unknown, the unforeseen, the ambiguous, the open-ended".
The exhibition is co-curated by Christina Kennedy and Charlotte Bonham-Carter,
former Assistant Curator: Collections at IMMA.
The official opening will take place
at 6.00pm on Friday 19 September to coincide with Culture Night.
Talk and Screening
On Friday 19 September at 7.30pm artist and curator Mark Garry will give an informal
talk in response to the curatorial themes in the exhibition and how they informed
the selection of artworks in the Lecture Room at IMMA.
Also on Friday 19 September, at 9.30pm and for one evening only, IMMA will present a
screening of Chien Andalou: An Andalusian Dog, a Surrealist film by Luis Buñuel and
Salvador Dali made in 1928. The screening will take place in the Lecture Room.
A fully-illustrated publication, with an introduction by Christina Kennedy and texts
by all the participants, accompanies the exhibition.
Image: Dorothy Cross, Saddle
Irish Museum of Modern Art - IMMA
Royal Hospital Military Road Kilmainham 8 - Dublin
Opening hours:
Tuesday - Saturday 10.00am - 5.30pm
except Wednesday 10.30am - 5.30pm
Sundays and Bank Holidays 12noon - 5.30pm
Late Opening: until 8.00pm on Thursday evenings until 18 September and until 11.00pm
on Culture Night 19 September
Monday Closed