MNAC - The National Museum of Contemporary Art
Bucharest
2-4 Izvor Street (Entrance Calea 13 Septembrie)
+40 21 3189137 FAX +40 21 3189138
WEB
The Painting Museum
dal 15/3/2005 al 22/5/2005
0040-21-3139115; 3125147; 3111026 FAX 0040-21-3121502; 3111026
WEB
Segnalato da

Mihnea Mircan


approfondimenti

Florin Tudor



 
calendario eventi  :: 




15/3/2005

The Painting Museum

MNAC - The National Museum of Contemporary Art, Bucharest

Muzeul de Pictura. A project that engages critically a sizeable portion of the museum's collection. It will look at the representations of communist power, the official portraits of dictator Ceausescu, the deviances of Socialist Realism and the chances of a public debate on the subject 15 years after the Romanian revolution. The curatorial strategy negotiates between showing and hiding the images, describing in a sense their post-revolutionary history.


comunicato stampa

Muzeul de Pictura

‘The Painting Museum’ is a project that engages critically a sizeable portion of the museum’s collection – its ‘dark side’. It will look at the representations of communist power, the official portraits of dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, the deviances of Socialist Realism and the chances of a public debate on the subject fifteen years after the Romanian revolution.

The curatorial strategy negotiates between showing and hiding the images, describing in a sense their post-revolutionary history: seldom openly discussed, yet always there, in the back of our minds, in the psychic backyard of unexamined recent history. Alongside conventional modes of presentation, the exhibition makes use of alternative spaces inside the museum, residual spaces left behind after the conversion of a wing in Palace of the Parliament (formerly known as the House of the People, the second largest building in the world and in itself the most obscenely triumphant symbol of communist power) into a gallery for contemporary art. In a sense, this strategy seeks to decontaminate the new space of the museum, as the curator describes the corridors between original wall and museum wall as encapsulating fifteen years of post-revolutionary history.

The works in question articulate a virtually complete history of modern art, as the authors resorted to various styles and stylistic devices to embellish – and seemingly diversify – an encomium which is fundamentally the same, the endless repetition of the same statement about authority and submission. From the ‘Rousseau Ceausescu’ to the ‘Jasper Johns Ceausescu’, the artists deploy indiscriminate metaphors, crooked readings of Romanian history and puzzling details, creating an official iconography with many involuntary lapses and a great dosage of tragic humor. Ranging from the picturesque to the sheer grotesque, this polymorphous portrait of Nicolae Ceausescu introduces viewers to a biological enigma. The subject seems unaffected by age, he actually grows younger, a process which culminates with a 1989 portrait of blossoming strength and youthful confidence. He is seen working on the country’s many construction sites, visiting factories or villages, in ‘permanent dialogue with the people’. He is the prototype of the ‘the new man’, which communist propaganda imposed as the fundamental aim of Romanian society.

‘The Painting Museum’ aims to launch a debate about essential questions of Romanian recent history, the communist and post-communist syndrome, investigating the contemporary reception and significance of these images and their role in the history of Romanian art. The exhibition is the first step in a long-term, cross-disciplinary research about the works and the period they so arduously represent.

Sound installation: Aurel Cornea

Texts: Matei Bejenaru, Cosmin Costinaş, Cătălin Gheorghe, Mihnea Mircan, Andrei Siclodi, Ştefan Tiron, Raluca Velisar. The texts will be available starting from 16 march on the website of MNAC.

Curator: Florin Tudor

Museum of Contemporary Art Bucharest
Palace of the Parliament, wing E4
Entrance through Calea 13 Septembrie
wednesday - sunday 10.00 - 18.00

IN ARCHIVIO [37]
Six exhibitions
dal 25/11/2015 al 19/3/2016

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