Everything was sleeping as if the universe were a mistake. In her first monographic exhibition in Barcelona, Roni Horn uses her work to question the reality that surrounds her, her own identity, and her relationship with the environment. The works in the show include her latest sculptural installation, which has only been shown once before at Hauser & Wirth gallery in New York.
The Fundació Joan Miró and Obra Social ”la Caixa” present the exhibition
Roni Horn. Everything was sleeping as if the universe were a mistake.
In her first monographic exhibition in Barcelona, Roni Horn uses
her work to question the reality that surrounds her, her own
identity, and her relationship with the environment.
The works in the show include her latest sculptural installation,
which has only been shown once before at Hauser & Wirth gallery
in New York.
Roni Horn is the winner of the fourth edition of the Joan Miró Prize,
a biennial award bestowed by the Fundació Joan Miró and Obra
Social ”la Caixa”, which includes a cash prize of 70,000 euros and
an invitation to exhibit her work in 2014.
The exhibition Roni Horn. Everything was sleeping as though the universe were
a mistake is organised by the Fundació Joan Miró and Obra Social ”la Caixa”. It
will be open to the public from 20 June to 28 September 2014 at Fundació Joan
Miró, and from 13 November 2014 to 1 March 2015 at CaixaForum Madrid. The
press conference was held with the presence of the artist Roni Horn, winner of
the 2013 Joan Miró Prize, Elisa Duran, Deputy Executive Officer of Fundació
”la Caixa”, and Rosa Maria Malet, Director of the Fundació Joan Miró.
The show has been conceived by the artist herself, and explores the different
media and approaches that she has used over the past twenty years. It covers
the major themes and formats that make up her work: sculptural installations,
photographic series, working drawings, and a floor piece entitled Rings of
Lispector (Água Viva) that combines drawing and literary quotes. The title of
the exhibition Everything was sleeping as if the universe were a mistake is
taken from Fernando Pessoa’s Livro do desassossego, published in 1935.
The exhibition is intended to offer an overall experience, like a huge installation
comprised of all the pieces on display. The selection of works, which Roni Horn
made with the Fundació Joan Miró and CaixaForum Madrid spaces specifically
in mind, is a compendium of the elements that underpin the artist’s creative
process: people, the landscape, light, words, water, presence, glass, faces,
change, forms, series, spaces, the appearance of the self, and time.
The show begins with a sculptural installation from the White Dickinson series
that includes quotes from the poet Emily Dickinson in each of the pieces. It is
followed by the photographic series You are the Weather, Part 2, an updated
version of one of Roni Horn’s key works that consists of one hundred black and
white and colour portraits of the same woman bathing in thermal waters in
Iceland. The woman’s facial expressions change subtly in each image,
reflecting the weather conditions around her.
The centrepiece of the exhibition is Untitled (‘My name is Mary Katherine
Blackwood. I am eighteen years old, and I live with my sister Constance. I have
often thought that with any luck at all I could have been born a werewolf,
because the two middle fingers on both my hands are the same length, but I
have had to be content with what I had. I dislike washing myself, and dogs, and
noise. I like my sister Constance, and Richard Plantagenet, and Amanita
phalloides, the deathcup mushroom. Everyone else in my family is dead.’), a
sculptural installation comprised of ten cylindrical cast glass elements in subtly
shifting shades of green. This recent piece, which has only previously been
exhibited at Hauser & Wirth gallery in New York, responds to the shifting light,
creating a sensory experience of colour, weight, lightness, solidity and fluidity.
The exhibition also includes two rooms set aside for working drawings. As in the
case of Joan Miró, drawing has been an essential aspect of Roni Horn’s work
over the last thirty years. She herself considers it her principal activity and the
seed of all her works, regardless of the final form or material they take.
Other works in the exhibition Roni Horn. Everything was sleeping as if the
universe were a mistake include Dead Owl, a double portrait of an owl that
questions appearance and similarity; the series of self-portraits a.k.a., the
photographic mosaic Her, Her, Her and Her, a project about scopophilia in the
locker rooms of a swimming pool complex in Iceland, which is exhibited
alongside the black glass sculpture Opposite of White, v.2; and Still Water
(The River Thames, for Example), a series of photographs showing the dark
side of the River Thames as a place where people go to commit suicide.
The floor piece Rings of Lispector (Água Viva), another example of the
importance of literature in Horn’s work, consists of passages from Brazilian
writer Clarice Lispector arranged in concentric circles on the floor that visitors
can walk on. The literary titles offer a narrative way into her work, while still
maintaining its ambiguity.
The exhibition includes three videos on the work of Roni Horn: a documentary
by US television network PBS; an episode from Contacts, a documentary series
on photographers by Jean Pierre Krief; and the video of the performance
Saying Water, which features a monologue by the artist.
2013 Joan Miró Prize: Roni Horn
Roni Horn was born in 1955 in New York, where she lives and works. She holds
a BFA from the Rhode Island Design School and an MFA from Yale University.
She received the CalArts/Alpert Award in the Arts and a Guggenheim
fellowship. Throughout her career, Horn has explored the mutable nature of art
through sculptures, photography, works on paper and books. Her work revolves
around the relationship between humankind and nature –a mirror-like
relationship in which we attempt to remake nature in our own image. Since
1975, Horn has travelled often to Iceland, whose landscape and isolation have
strongly influenced her practice.
She has had solo shows at the Art Institute of Chicago; Centre Georges
Pompidou, Paris; MoMA, New York, and the Whitney Museum of American Art
in New York. Her group exhibitions include Documenta in Kassel and the
Venice Biennale, among others.
Roni Horn was the winner of the 2013 Joan Miró Prize, which includes a cash
prize of 70,000 euros and the opportunity to produce a monographic exhibition
in Barcelona and Madrid. The jury emphasised that Horn “impresses audiences
with a multifaceted practice that links aspects of nature, the landscape and
popular culture with mechanisms of perception and communication.”
The jury of the 2013 Joan Miró Prize was made up of leading professionals from
the contemporary art world: Alfred Pacquement, former Director of the Centre
Georges Pompidou (Paris); Vicent Todolí, former Director of the Tate Modern
(London) and current Director of Hangar Biccoca (Milan); Poul Erik Tøjner,
Director of the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art (Humlebæk, Denmark); Rosa
Maria Malet, Director of the Fundació Joan Miró (Barcelona); and Nimfa Bisbe,
Director of the Contemporary Art Collection ”la Caixa”. The previous winners of
the Joan Miró Prize are Olafur Eliasson, Pipilotti Rist and Mona Hatoum.
Catalogue
Fundació Joan Miró and ”la Caixa” Foundation
Main text: Julie Ault in conversation with Roni Horn
Editions in Catalan, Spanish and English
Image: Dead Owl, 1997. 2 Iris-printed photographs on paper. 29 x 29 in. / 73.7 x 73.7 cm each
Further information
Communication Dept. Obra Social “la Caixa”
Josué García
jgarcial@fundacionlacaixa.es
+34 93 404 61 51
+34 638 14 63 30
http://press.lacaixa.es/socialprojects/
Press Office, Fundació Joan Miró
Elena Febrero / Helena Nogué
press@fundaciomiro-bcn.org
+34 93 443 94 70
+34 646 190 423 / +34 630 634 905
http://fundaciomiro-bcn.org
Press conference: 18 June at 12.00
Opening: 19 June at 19.30
Fundació Joan Miró
Parc de Montjuïc s/n - 08038 Barcelona
Opening times
Tuesday to Saturday, from 10.00 to 19.00 (until 20.00 from July to September)
Thursday, from 10.00 to 21.30
Sunday and public holidays, from 10.00 to 14.30
Monday (except public holidays), closed
Admission
€7 Advance tickets: www.fundaciomiro-bcn.org
Annual pass
Admission to the permanent collection and temporary exhibitions for one year:
€12
2x1 admission
Thursday, from 18.00 to 21.30
Guided tours of the exhibition
Saturdays at 11.00. Free of charge
Group reservations
Tel. 934 439 479
education@fundaciomiro-bcn.org