numerocivico.info
 home
 chi siamo
 come pubblicare
 contatti
 architettura
 fotografia
 arti visive
 musica
 cinema | video
 paesaggio
 danza
 teoria | critica
 design
 teatro
 aste
 fiere
 archivi
 fondazioni
 biennali
 gallerie
 editori
 istituzioni
 festival
 musei
 concerti
 esposizioni
 concorsi
 master
 convegni
 residenze
 corsi
 spettacoli
 libri
 riviste
 dischi
 film
 opere
 multipli
 arte | moderna
 19° secolo
 | contemporanea
 arte orientale
 italiano
 english
 INFO

Museo Universitario Arte Contemporaneo, MUAC
Insurgentes Sur 3000
Centro Cultural Universitario
Delegación Coyoacán. C.P. 04510
México D.F.
T +52 (55) 5622 69 39 & +52 (55) 5622 69 72
difusion@muac.unam.mx
www.muac.unam.mx

segnalato da e-flux

condiviso da numero civico rovereto

 ARTI VISIVE


Enrique Ježik, "What comes from outside is reinforced from within," 2008. Action-intervention at The MeetFactory, Prague. Courtesy of the artist.


Museo Universitario Arte Contemporaneo, MUAC

Enrique Ježik: Obstruct, Destroy, Conceal



11 June-November 2011

Museo Universitario Arte Contemporaneo, MUAC
Insurgentes Sur 3000
Centro Cultural Universitario
Delegación Coyoacán. C.P. 04510
México D.F.
T +52 (55) 5622 69 39 & +52 (55) 5622 69 72
difusion@muac.unam.mx

www.muac.unam.mx
o The exhibition displays for the very first time an extensive review of the works and projects of an artist that has played a key role in the narrative of Mexican contemporary art

o It is organized in six sections relating to the concepts of violence devices, spaces and operations.

In the last two decades Enrique Ježik (Cordoba, Argentina, 1961) has deployed a complex work of exploring the structures and devices of power, surveillance, repression, control and violence, from within the polymorphic practice of contemporary sculpture. For this artist, sculpture is a way of thinking power and violence as a stubborn drive on body matter. His performances, videos, and specific interventions that involve tactics-ranging from the use of bullets to Braille writing-testify to a historical period where the means of destruction and control technologies create the spaces, metaphors, devices and paths of politics.

The exhibition Enrique Ježik: Obstruct, Destroy, Conceal displays for the very first time an extensive review of the works and projects of an artist that has played a key role in the narrative of Mexican contemporary art.

Organized in six sections relating to the concepts of violence devices, spaces and operations ("Obstruction," "Destruction," "Concealment," "The Enemy's Body," "Operations Theater" and "Sacrificial Constructivism"), the exhibition-curated by Cuauhtémoc Medina-travels over the territory of objects, forces and images, put together by Ježik while musing on the symbolic and technical relationship of sculpture with domination devices.

The keenest focus of Ježik's recent work has been the exploration of visual and physical power, and both the iconography and the effects of the weapon as a prosthesis of the body and an instrument of destruction. The weapon appears in his work in a multiple sense: as an equivalent predecessor to the sculptor's hammer and chisel of the sculptor and as a sculptural artifact of power and violence. While the use of rifles and pistols has long been present in art-all over the second half of the twentieth century-Ježik emphasizes the physical dimension of arms as a historical and aesthetic vector.

"We live, in a single schizophrenic gesture, in a civilization simultaneously obsessed with and haughtily indifferent to violence," said Cuauhtémoc Medina. "We live in a historical period where the political alternatives are dissolved and the main purpose of society would seem to be security and control, where power claims to exist in order to address the alleged proliferation of internal and external enemies, managing and consciously or unconsciously transforming all social conflict in a military or law enforcement issue. This climate is the political moment outlined in Ježik's work, not in offering tactics to escape this hegemony, but in witnessing it through sensitive operations."

Complementing the exhibition, MUAC will release the book Enrique Ježik: Obstruct, Destroy, Conceal, a comprehensive collection of the works of the Argentinean-Mexican sculptor. Edited by Cuauhtémoc Medina, this highly illustrated volume includes an interview and philosophical, historical and aesthetic essays by José Luis Barrios, Néstor García Canclini and David Goldberg.

Enrique Ježik: Obstruct, Destroy, Conceal is part of the core exhibitions within Fantasmas de la libertad (Ghosts of Freedom), a cycle that gathers artistic proposals that not only suggest specific points of view, but engage in taking a stance with regard to current common conflicts throughout Latin America.







 Altri Eventi

 Eventi in programmazione