calendario eventi  :: 




1/8/2006

Surprise, Surprise

ICA - Institute of Contemporary Arts, London

The work of 40 high-profile contemporary artists including John Baldessari, Matthew Barney, Larry Clark, Thomas Demand, Olafur Eliasson, Damien Hirst, Jenny Holzer, Martin Kippenberger, Barbara Kruger and Ed Ruscha. The artists taking part will be displaying pieces atypical of the work for which they are best known. A playful but provocative exhibition which shows how the apparently familiar can confront us with something unexpected.


comunicato stampa

Work of 40 high-profile contemporary artists

Featuring: Doug Aitken, John Baldessari, Matthew Barney, Christian Boltanski, Jake and Dinos Chapman, Larry Clark, Martin Creed, John Currin, Thomas Demand, Peter Doig, Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset, Olafur Eliasson, Nan Goldin, Douglas Gordon, Rodney Graham, Andreas Gursky, Thomas Hirschhorn, Damien Hirst, Carsten Holler, Jenny Holzer, Anish Kapoor, Martin Kippenberger, Barbara Kruger, Robert Mapplethorpe, Paul McCarthy, Mariko Mori, Juan Munoz, Takashi Murakami, Ernesto Neto, Albert Oehlen, Chris Ofili, Raymond Pettibon, Elizabeth Peyton, Richard Prince, Neo Rauch, Ed Ruscha, Tino Sehgal, Cindy Sherman, Santiago Sierra, Wolfgang Tillmans, Rikrit Tiravanija, Kara Walker (with Klaus Burgel), Christopher Williams

Surprise, Surprise is an exhibition that appears at first glance to be a typical summer 'blockbuster', the stellar cast of artists promising 'wow' factor, familiarity and accessibility.

But the forty high-profile artists taking part will in fact be displaying pieces that are atypical of the work for which they are best known. By reversing expectations through a presentation of the unexpected, the unfamiliar, the unknown and the one-off, Surprise, Surprise offers both revelation and a challenge to the preconceptions we readily impose on exhibitions of contemporary artists' work, often before we have actually seen them.

Contemporary art is certainly not unique in fuelling and trading on expectations through the advance promotion of well-known names. Large-scale group exhibitions - and most typically the annual round of epic summer shows - tend to play most aggressively to this kind of recognition factor, stimulating interest in the show through the promise of familiarity that more established artists' names bring. As a strategy, such pre-publicity only highlights an increasing reliance on the artist-as-personality, regardless of the qualities of individual pieces of work. And if what is then exhibited exactly matches our expectations, it might only serve bolster a one-dimensional impression of an artist's work.

Compounding this, artworks are often included in group exhibitions precisely because they are both typical of the artist, and at the same time validate the show's thesis or themes. Perhaps it is inevitable that these tactics - which drive the popular discourse around contemporary art - tend to reinforce preconceptions rather than open up a wider field of discussion, and propose alternative viewpoints.

Surprise, Surprise is a playful but provocative exhibition which, in showing how the apparently familiar can confront us with something less expected, aims to reassert the importance of art's fundamental ability to point out what we do not know, as well as allowing us to recognise what we do.

Surprise, Surprise will be accompanied by a publication, available free to visitors to the exhibition. It will contain a text by the curators of the exhibition, images of the works on display, and information on the participating artists.

Image: Jenny Holzer, Lustmord (Fabricated 1996-1997, Lustmord text date 1993-1995), 312 Bones, 33 with engraved silver rings

Institute of Contemporary Arts
The Mall, London
Open 12-7.30pm daily

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