The first exhibition in Ireland of the work of the radical post-war Cobra group of artists and poets. Comprising over 110 works by 19 artists, it includes a major collection of paintings and drawings by each of the key figures: Pierre Alechinsky, Karel Appel, Constant, Asger Jorn and Carl-Henning Pedersen.
Copenhagen Brussels Amsterdam at IMMA
The first exhibition in Ireland of the work of the radical post-war Cobra group
of artists and poets opens to the public at the Irish Museum of Modern Art on
Thursday 3 July 2003. Comprising over 110 works by 19 artists, it includes a
major collection of paintings and drawings by each of the key figures: Pierre
Alechinsky, Karel Appel, Constant, Asger Jorn and Carl-Henning Pedersen. The
main focus of the show is on the ground-breaking Cobra exhibitions held in
Copenhagen, Brussels and Amsterdam between 1948 and 1951. The exhibition is a
National Touring Exhibition, organised by the Hayward Gallery, London, in
collaboration with BALTIC, The Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead. The
exhibition is presented at IMMA in association with THE IRISH TIMES.
The name Cobra was coined in 1948 by the Belgian poet Christian Dotremont from
the three cities where the main participants lived: Copenhagen, Brussels and
Amsterdam. Explosively expressive, with an emphasis on myth and the untutored
art of children and the mentally ill, the Cobra artists were anti-elitist in
their desire to address a universal public. Painting and drawing spontaneously,
they produced imagery teeming with fantastic creatures and exuding intense
emotions, such as rage, joy and humour. Cobra was also anti-specialist and
collaborative: poets painted and organised exhibitions, artists wrote manifestos
and illustrated and published books of poetry.
The exhibition conveys the energy and subversive power of this influential
movement, its experimental and provocative spirit, and its attempts at forging a
new visual language in a post-war climate of both austerity and hope. Key
publications of the period and collaborative book projects by the Cobra artists
and poets are also included.
The exhibition has been selected by Peter Shield, art historian and chief
curator of the exhibition, with Roger Malbert, Senior Curator, National Touring
Exhibitions, on behalf of the Hayward, and Sune Nordgren, Director of Baltic.
An illustrated catalogue, published by the Hayward Gallery, with essays by Peter
Shield and art historian Graham Birtwistle, and a chronology and artists'
biographies, accompanies the exhibition (price euro 25.00).
Alongside the Cobra exhibition IMMA is also displaying a selection of works by
Outsider artists. The Irish Museum of Modern Art has had an interest in the
work of Outsider artists since 1998, when it was given a spectacular collection
of work by the Musgrave Kinley Collection of Outsider Art. Since then, works by
Outsiders have been represented repeatedly in displays of the Museum's own
Collection and throughout Ireland, North and South, through IMMA's National
Programme. Outsider artists are self-taught, making art as their only viable
means of self-expression. They are often marginalised through mental ill health
or social disadvantage.
For over 30 years, the Hayward Gallery, part of London's South Bank Centre has
played a key role in creating imaginative, high-profile exhibitions in London
and, through National Touring Exhibitions, the UK and, occasionally, in Ireland.
On Thursday 3 July at 11.30am Roger Malbert and Peter Shield will discuss the
Cobra movement in the Lecture Room at IMMA. Booking essential on
tel: 01-612 9948 or email ed.comm@modernart.ie
Cobra: Copenhagen Brussels Amsterdam continues in IMMA's New Galleries until
21 September 2003.
Image: Constant, Animaux, 1949, oil on canvas, 84.5 x
69 cm, ABN AMRO Collection
Admission is free.
Opening hours: Tue - Sat 10.00am
- 5.30pm
Sun, Bank Holidays 12 noon - 5.30pm
Mondays Closed
For further information and colour and black and white images please contact
Monica Cullinane at Tel : +353 1 612 9900, Fax : +353 1 612 9999
Irish Museum of Modern Art
Royal Hospital
Military Road
Kilmainham
Dublin 8
Ireland
Phone +353 1 612 9900
Fax +353 1 612 9999