Tent
Rotterdam
Witte de Withstraat 50
+31 1041354 98
WEB
Three Exhibition
dal 30/4/2015 al 4/7/2015

Segnalato da

Josephine van Kranendonk



 
calendario eventi  :: 




30/4/2015

Three Exhibition

Tent, Rotterdam

Priscila Fernandes brings together a selection of her recent installation pieces and exhibits newly developed work. The Museum of Unconditional Surrender is a temporary fictional project that redistributes the hierarchies between the artworks. Eva Olthof presents an installation in which her new publication Return to Rightful Owner plays a central role.


comunicato stampa

Priscila Fernandes
Those bastards in caps come to have fun and relax by the seaside instead of continuing to work in the factory.

This solo exhibition by Priscila Fernandes brings together a selection of her recent installation pieces and exhibits newly developed work. Fernandes (b. 1981, Coimbra, based in Rotterdam) questions the influence of artistic processes such as creativity and non-conformism in education, labor and play and how these are included for both practical and ideological reasons in her work.

In the anterior chamber Fernandes will present The Book of Aesthetic Education of the Modern School (2014), an installation that functions as a temporary learning spot, inspired by the radical ideas of the Escuela Moderna in Barcelona (1901 – 1906). Among the many books published by the school, no textbook on art education can be found. Priscila Fernandes asks what this book might look like and published the textbook ¿Y El Arte? in 2014 for the Escuela Moderna. The book raises questions about art and education, and the role of art in shaping a new society. The Master of Education and Arts at the Piet Zwart Institute will use the installation for a seminar on Critical Pedagogy. During meetings for students as well as a number of public lectures, the field in which educators, curators and artists move, will be mapped.

The title of the exhibition refers to a French newspaper article from 1936 and to Fernandes’ interest in questions pertaining to the relationship between labor and leisure time in our highly productive society. Fascinated by the systematic painting technique of French pointillists derived from their anarchic thought, Fernandes dissects the foundations of their visual language in a series of photographs. Around 1910 the themes in the works of the pointillists changed gradually from social issues to painting idyllic landscapes and coastal towns in the Mediterranean. This development might be linked to the rise of mass tourism for the average citizen, and with the changing understanding of labor and leisure time. What is the position of art and the artist in shaping society, and how do society and its values influence the works of artists?

----

The Museum of Unconditional Surrender
Curated by Niekolaas Johannes Lekkerkerk
Haris Epaminonda, Yoeri Guépin, Tim Hollander, Hannah James, Simon Kentgens, Una Knox, Wesley Meuris, Ieva Misevičiūtė, Mandla Reuter, Wouter Sibum

The Museum of Unconditional Surrender (The MoUS) is a temporary fictional museum at TENT that redistributes the hierarchies between artwork and the objects that make their presentation possible. The group exhibition lends its framework from the prologue to the eponymous novel by Dubravka Ugrešić from 1998. The text puts forward a situation in which a number of objects come together coincidentally due to the healthy appetite of a walrus in the Berlin zoo. In the book, the objects function as both actors and props: they make the story possible, but simultaneously remain silently present in the background.

With this prologue as a point of departure, The MoUS exhibits a diverse range of artistic practices concerning the material and written language of an exhibition within an institutional context. Temporary walls, press releases, plants, work descriptions, plinths, projectors and sockets move to the foreground; guiding objects that inform the vocabulary of an exhibition, yet tend to be withheld from sight and thought to the audience, as "support structures" and "carriers" of a work. Ultimately, The Museum of Unconditional Surrender aims to open a space in which we can face the object on an equal footing, making the persistent relationships between objects en subjects ambiguous, towards an idea of objects as partners in our daily working and living practices.The MoUS consists of a group exhibition, lectures, a museum night and publication, in which the experience of the exhibited objects to the audience is put to the test. Niekolaas Johannes Lekkerkerk is TENT's 2015 Curatorial Fellow.

---

Project presentation: Eva Olthof: In der Freihand
Where is history "made?" Inspired by this question Eva Olthof has worked since 2010 on projects in which she researches certain events or locations through testimonials and documentation. She collects fragments, photographs (both taken by herself and found), archival material, texts and objects, searching for the boundaries between the documentary and imaginary image. Olthof will present an installation at TENT in which her new publication Return to Rightful Owner plays a central role. The politics of forgetting, remembering and citing, is the central theme of the book, which takes the origination of the Amerika-Gedenkblibliothek in Berlin as its starting point. This public academic library, modeled after the Public Library, was opened in 1954 as a gift from the American people to the population of West Berlin.

Image: Priscila Fernandes, The Book of Aesthetic Education of the Modern School, 2014–15. Installation. Courtesy of the artist.

Press Contact:
Josephine van Kranendonk, josephine@tentrotterdam.nl

Opening: Friday, May 1, 18h

TENT
Witte de Withstraat 50 - 3012 BR Rotterdam
Opening hours tu-su, 11-18 h

IN ARCHIVIO [60]
Nicky Assmann
dal 14/10/2015 al 30/1/2016

Attiva la tua LINEA DIRETTA con questa sede