3 / 2 011 english
Transcription
3 / 2 011 english
3 / 2 0 11 ENGLISH Exhibition programme 28.9.11–8.1.12 Anitra Lucander, Kompositio Anitra Lucander – Poet of Colour Anitra Lucander’s (1918–2000) retrospective contains paintings, collages, drawings and graphic works. Part of the EMMA’s classics series presenting the great names of Finnish Modernism. Yang Fudong – Utopia and Reality Yang Fudong’s (born 1971, Beijing) four video installations will be shown in EMMA’s media galleries. Yang Fudong, No Snow on the Broken Bridge. 11.11.11.– Juhani Harri Juhani Harri’s (1939-2003) assemblages. Objects worn by time and weather, found in flea markets, litterbins and nature form the “palette” from which Harri builds his nostalgic tales. 2.3.–10.6.12 Italian Futurism Inspired by the poet Filippo Tommasso Marinetti’s (1876–1944) famous Manifesto, Futurism was an important art movement in Italy in the first half of the 20th century. Focussing on the new urban world and concept of man, it scorned all that was old and traditional, and glorified machines, technology, speed, noise and movement. The exhibition covers the whole span of Futurism from the early 1900s to the 1940s, and includes oil paintings, watercolours, pastels, design objects, tables, cabinets, and sketches for costume and stage props. Juhani Harri, Vaeltava juutalainen, 2000, esinekooste. Saastamoisen säätiön taidekokoelma. 2.3.–10.6.11 Sophie Calle – Take Care of Yourself Sophie Calle (b.1953) is a French artist whose work Prenez Soin de Vous (Take Care of Yourself, 2007) will be shown at EMMA in its English version as a wide compilation of video films and photographs. The work gets its name from the last words of an e-mail sent by Calle’s ex-boyfriend ending their relationship. Mixing private and public life is characteristic of Calle’s work. On Permanent Display The Saastamoinen Foundation Art Collection Rougena Zatkova: Marinetti Soleil, 1920. Luce Marinetti Collection 2 With its nearly 500 works, the Saastamoinen Foundation Collection fills half of EMMA’s total exhibition space. The current hanging, Red, consists primarily of contemporary works that revel in the myriad hues of red. They span the entire field of visual arts, from video and photographic art to painting and sculpture. On display are 40 works by almost as many artists. Kansikuvassa Anitra Lucander. Kuva yksityiskokoelma. Excerpts from the programme: Comic artist Kaisa Leka tells of bike trips she’s made over the past five years in Finland, Norway, Sweden, Germany, France, Iceland and Russia, illustrating them with photos and comic strips. Fairy Tale Marathon organised by the DCA Dance School The DCA Dance School brings fresh winds from the world of dance to the WeeGee Art Marathon. Performers include young talented winners from the DCA Dance School’s Finnish Championships and the semi-professional DCA Dancers. The art marathon’s Silence Walk arranged by Silence ry seeks to improve your well-being through silence. Take the whole family orienteering with a collector’s treasure-trove map. Fulfil yourself Come and make medals and badges from recyclable materials with the Finnish Broadcasting’s Olotila team and Recycling Designer Aija Rouhiainen. Olotila inspires an everyday where you can turn somersaults, test your limits and win, have fun and generally fulfil yourself. 6.10. do ners an r trai h you On wit 1 ee 13.– G e e W ver to You’ve never run in a marathon like this! WeeGee and EMMA are celebrating their fifth anniversary with a four-day Art Marathon on 13–16 October. Participants are invited to enjoy the cultural benefits of the place in an entirely new and sporty way. At the art fuelling stations along the track in the exhibition centre, marathon runners can make instruments and medals from recycling materials, test their dancing skills and build fairy castles. Thurs. 13.10. 11am–6pm, birthday, free entry. Free games bag for the first hundred. Fri. 14.10. 11am–12pm, S Group customer-owner day, Adults 5€ with S Card. Sat. 15.10. 11am–12pm, Sun. 16.10. 11am–5pm. Entrance 10€ adults, under 18 and over 70 free. Ticket includes games bag and marathon wristband. Free bus to WeeGee from Helsinki, Kiasma bus-stop. Thurs. 10.40am, 2pm, 4pm Fri. 10.40am, 2pm, 5pm, 7pm, 9pm Sat. 10.40am, 2pm, 5pm, 7pm, 9pm Sun. 10.40am, 1pm, 3pm Musical instrument workshop Come and make your own instrument from recycling materials. From a floorball ball to an ocarina! Wii Games Room Wii Sports Resort and Wii Fit Plus and balancer board Meet well-known figures from the world of sport and art in the football tricks room. All in support of recreation activities for SOS Children’s Village. Build a fairy castle together with Lego and Palikkatakomo, the Finnish Lego Hobbyists Group. Star of Africa board game – 60 years old! Star of Africa World Cup qualifying heats. xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx will appear in the café. Check the day’s programme: www.emma.museum/maraton Saturday’s natural gas bus sponsored by Gasum Oy. Watch out for any possible changes! 3 Sommitelma,1957 Ruukku Fezistä, 1954, öljy, Yksityiskokoelma. ” Through my painting I wish to convey the impression of an harmonious peace from somewhere beyond ordinary existence.” 4 Kollaasi Text Sanna Teittinen A nitra Lucander’s (1918–2000) fascination for ancient civilisations and religions had a major influence on her work and moulding her concept of art. She saw art as a means of escaping the mundane, everyday and superficial in the direction of an ageless and permanent expression. India and its religions had a particular influence on her idea of painting, for to her it was also meditation. Her works are permeated by a refined spirituality and timelessness. Her work in the 1950s made Anitra Lucander one of the earliest pioneers of abstract art in this country, helping to reshape the visual arts in the post-war period. She was an extremely Exhibition at EMMA, 28.9.11–8.1.2012 versatile and innovative artist, and the enthusiasm that characterised her three-decade long career led her to experiment in many branches of the arts. Not only was she a painter, but also a colour designer, draughtsman and graphic artist. Lucander’s wide interest in materials led to her making paper collages from the 1950s onwards and later, from the 1960s, to textile appliqué and a variety of other experiments with different materials. Due to her sensitive and profound sense of colour, Lucander was employed as an advisor on colour design in buildings during the 1960s and 1970s, collaborating with such architects Anitra Lucander as Aarno Ruusuvuori, the designer of the WeeGee building. Anitra Lucander’s works are not only distinguished by their spirituality and timelessness, but also reveal her enthusiasm for travelling, different cultures, architecture and colour. Colour, however, remained uppermost. Though her form language, materials and techniques changed over the decades, colour continued to play the leading role. Kirjoittaja on näyttelyn kuraattori – Poet of Colour Moskeija II, 1968, öljy kankaalle, 104 x 104. Yksityiskokelma. 5 ”Each place has its own colour scale … Athens I remember as ochre, Istambul blue-grey. Paris, too, is blue-grey.” Huvudstadsbladet, 24.2.1969 Anitra Lucander. Private collection Anitra Lucander in Chandigarh, India, in the mid-1960s. In the background is the High Court building, one of the many buildings designed for the city by Le Corbusier. Anitra Lucander in Tapiola and the World From exemplary family girl to artist A nitra Lucander (1918–2000) came from an affluent, multicultural background, a mixture of Russian, Estonian and Finnish-Swedish. To begin with it looked like a conventional family story: well brought-up girl marries early and gives birth to two children. But then came divorce and everything changed. By the second half of the 1940s, she was a single-parent bringing up two small boys, simultaneously studying in the evenings at the Helsinki Free Art School. To the Tapiola Nallenpolku studio After the war there were few decent studios available in Finland and Lucander was constantly on the outlook for a better place to live and work. She acquired her first proper studio in 1955 in Nallenpolku, Tapiola, where the Artists’ Association of Finland had had built an atelier complex. There she lived with her sons – at that time the first and only female artist – in a high-ceilinged sculptor’s studio for five years, from 1955 to 1960. Thanks to having a real studio, Lucander could at long last fully concentrate on being an artist. Anitra Lucander and Marianne Maury in Paris, 1955. Private collection. 6 Travelling as a way of life Sweden, France, Italy, Spain, Greece, Morocco, Egypt, Jordan, Turkey, Israel, Iran, India, Nepal. Travelling and the resulting experiences profoundly influenced Lucander’s art. She began travelling in 1948, first to Sweden, and then almost every year a bit further afield. Open-mindedly and courageously she turned travelling into a way of life. Anitra Lucander mostly travelled alone, though occasionally with a friend, one of her sons or a colleague. She did not paint on her trips as she preferred to travel light, and also on a very tight budget. Everything was of interest – the people, culture, architecture, temples and mosques. What she remembered most from her travels were the colours. She was particularly enchanted by the strong turquoise colour of mosques. Serious illness during the 1970s and 1980s prevented Lucander from travelling any more. Anitra Lucander in her Nallenpolku studio, Tapiola, 1956. Huvudstadsbladet archives. Text Hannele Savelainen In 1961 Anitra Lucander acquires a loft studio in Vironkatu, Helsinki. Private collection. Why is EMMA in WeeGee such a suitable place for an Anitra Lucander exhibition? The Anitra Lucander – Poet of Colour exhibition is part of EMMA’s series of classics presenting the leading lights of Finnish modernism. It is particularly suitable for EMMA as so many things connect the artist to Tapiola and WeeGee. She had her first real studio in Tapiola’s Nallenpolku in the 1950s. Also she had close ties with Hagalund Manor, working in one of the outhouses during the summers in the early 1960s. It was via colour design that Anitra Lucander became associated with the architect Aarno Ruusuvuori, WeeGee’s designer. She worked as Ruusuvuori’s colour advisor at the end of the 1960s on Helsinki’s Neo-Classical centre in the area around the market square. Text Päivi Talasmaa Portrait Aleksi Kinnunen Yang Fudong This autumn EMMA’s media galleries will be devoted to the contemporary Chinese artist Yang Fudong, offering the public the opportunity of seeing his video installations Seven Intellectuals in Bamboo Forest (parts 3-5), East of Que Village, as well as stills from the video No Snow on the Broken Bridge. Yang Fudong is one of the leading lights of Chinese video and cinema art, a brilliant interpreter with a magical touch to his camera. Yang Fudong’s video installations at EMMA Seven Intellectuals in Bamboo Forest, part 5. 35mm film transferred to DVD, 91 min, 2007 C hinese experimental art has undergone a major transformation in the last few decades. Thanks to the incredible economic boom, contemporary art has experienced a renaissance. Yang Fudong’s works provide an excellent picture of what is happening in Chinese contemporary history and art. The artists who rose to prominence in the 1990s had been born in the 1970s and 1980s, and could also travel abroad. This made it possible to forge contacts and relations on the international art scene. But unlike the precious generation that fled China, they stayed in their homeland. These young artists have also had better opportunities to work and earn than their predecessors. Yang Fudong, who was born in Beijing in 1971 and now lives in Shanghai, studied at the China Academy of Fine Arts in Hangzhou, near Shanghai. This progressive school was one of the few places where it was possible to become acquainted with international contemporary and video art. Fudong’s first video was I Love my Motherland, which was originally shown in a Shanghai shopping mall as was the custom in those days. The First Intellectual Yang Fudong’s reputation grew rapidly and in 2000 Ai Wei Wei, perhaps China’s most famous artist, invited him to participate in the Shanghai Biennale with a series of three photographs entitled The First Intellectual. They depict the weakness of the human condition through an injured young man in a suit standing with a brick in his hand against an urban backdrop. The figures are comparable to early idyllic images of youth published by the Peoples’ Republic of China. Also Fudong’s first film An Estranged Paradise (1997–2002) portrays the restlessness and uncertainty of young intellectuals. Seven Intellectuals in Bamboo Forest Yang Fudong began work on the five-part film Seven Intellectuals in Bamboo Forest in 2002. The series follows the lives of seven young people – two women and five men. The actors are young amateurs. Fudong wished to use people younger than himself to symbolise the future. The film was finished in 2007 and the 7 No Snow on the Broken Bridge No Snow on the Broken Bridge first complete showing was as one of the major presentations of contemporary art, the Venice Biennale. The work is based on a story of seven Taoist artists and poets during the Wei and Jin Dynasties (220–420 AD) who met in a bamboo grove to converse, drink, sing and play traditional musical instruments. The group sought to escape the responsibilities of earthly life in the pursuit of individuality and freedom. In the film, however, the intellectuals are modern Chinese youth longing for personal freedom in China’s increasingly capitalist society. The actors are dressed in nostalgic 1920s and 1930s clothes, the idea for which came from photos of the French writer and philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre that Fudong had seen. 8 The film, parts 1–5 All five parts consist of black-and-white film transferred to DVD. Fudong did not have a screenplay to work from and the film is based on the director’s spontaneous camerawork. It contains little actual dialogue. The film is in five episodes without a common story. The first part (2003), shown at EMMA in 2009, is about the young people’s trip to the Yellow Mountain in Huangshan, Anshui Province, which holds an important place in traditional Chinese painting. The second part (2004) shows them in a building, the nature of which is left unclear. They discuss love and sex although this is not physically shown in the film. In the third part (2005), they set off for the countryside to learn about farm work. During the Cultural Revolution in China, intellectuals were sent to do hard manual work in the countryside, but in Fudong’s film it is for the experience that the young people choose to learn about different jobs; working during the day and resting in the evenings. Their journey continues in the fourth part (2006) to a small island. They love the sea and wish to live on the island undisturbed and isolated. This kind of life, however, is utopian. In the last part (2007) the young people return to the city and reality, and to new experiences. Though still a young collective, they now start to think about the future. Xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx In his film, Yang Fudong shows how young people experience a world torn between a conflicting past and present, and a future clouded by uncertainty. As Fudong plays with the concept of time, his black-and-white film takes on the character of old photographs. The parts form a never ending narrative, like tableaux of abstract works of art. East of Que Village East of Que Village video (2007) depicts the Chinese countryside in its daily struggle for survival against encroaching urbanisation. It focuses on the feelings of isolation and loss experienced in different parts of the countryside in today’s China: traditional communities are disintegrating, villages are being swallowed up surrounding conurbations and the struggle to make a living is an everyday reality. The world featured in the video is the cold, bleak countryside of North China in which a group of scrawny village watchdogs fight for survival. This lyrical work is a metaphor for the feelings of alienation and desolation Fudong sees in modern society. No Snow on the Broken Bridge they yearn to catch one last vestige of Broken Bridge: the memory of translucent, languid snow.” (Yang Fudong) In the works to be shown in EMMA, Yuang Fudong takes you to a culturally and geographically varying China. The still photos from the video No Snow on the Broken Bridge (2006) were taken in West Lake, Hangzhou, considered to be the Venice of China. They brilliantly manifest the mystical and dreamlike aesthetics that characterise all of Yang Fudong’s output. ”Four robed guests, four ladies in qi pao (mandarin dress), four young people in suits, and four girls dressed as boys gather at West Lake in early spring. As winter fades for them, 9 Text Päivi Karttunen Photos Ari Karttunen and Matti Ruotsalainen At the end of autumn this year, an exhibition of the works of Juhani Harri (1939–2003) will be opened in EMMA’s SALI gallery. The 70 works on display, dating from the 1960s up to the artist’s premature death, come mainly from the collections deposited with the Saastamoinen Art Foundation and the Pori Art Museum. Juhannusyö 1967. Esinekooste. 31 x 43 x 10,5. Porin taidemuseon tallenuskokoelma. Juhani Harri at EMMA from 11.11.2011 TRANSIENT, TIMELESS J Lintujen palanut kaupunki 1960. Kollaasi. 97,5 x 62 x 1,5. SSKO. 10 Juhani Harri. Private collection uhani Harri came from Ostrobothnia where his father was pastor of the parish of Palo saari near Vaasa. In summer 1957 they travelled to Sweden, visiting the exhibition of the surrealist Halmstad Group and meeting the painter Max Walter Svanberg (1912–1994). Svanberg, whose birds and butterflies were already familiar to Harri, became an early source of inspiration. Another important influence on the young Harri was the French expressionist Georges Rouault (1871–1958), who painted religious motifs. In 1959 Harri moved to Helsinki and began studying at the Free Art School. Harri started out as a painter, but soon changed over to making assemblages, “boxes”. To begin with these were ordinary fruit boxes, wooden drawers or the bottoms of suitcases. More or less anything could be used to fill them: worthless debris, worn-out and discarded objects found in attics, streets and building sites. The assemblages contained old Ballerina 1965. Esinekooste. 35 x 34,5 x 17. SSKO. wallpaper, books, leather, tinsel, wire, honeycombs, lace, stuffed birds, old photos, bird’s eggs and sand. Later, in order to protect the little worlds he was creating, he covered them with glass. The earlier assemblages were rather small and decorative, but later when his expression became simplified, they grew in size and his choice of materials became more limited. The boxes remained characteristic of the artist’s production from the 1960s onwards even though the sizes varied. In his later production, Harri again produced miniature assemblages, this time from cigar boxes. He also made installations like the one in Tampere from old black and white ice skates of which, unfortunately, no documentary evidence survives. Art historically speaking, Juhani Harri belongs to New Realism, the international art movement that came into existence in the 1960s. One of the artists pointing the way was the American Robert Rauschenberg who since the 1950s had been using objects and stuffed animals in his works. Harri was also influenced by members of the French group founded in 1960, Les Nouveaux Réalistes, like Arman, Yves Klein and Jean Tinguely. At the 1968 Kassel Documenta, Harri met the American artist Edward Kienholz (1927–1994) and they became life-long friends. The following year he helped erect Kienholz’s Roxy´s brothel installation at the ARS69 Exhibition in Helsinki’s Ateneum. 11 WeeGee building, 2nd floor c v e r a n t a ANITRA LUCANDER OURSLER video ANITRA LUCANDER sali galleria alkaen 11.11. agora ANITRA LUCANDER porras JUHANI HARRI ANITRA LUCANDER YANG FUDONG YANG FUDONG raitti S A A S T A M O I S E N K O K O E L M A V A I H T U V A T N Ä Y T T E L Y T salonki PUNAINEN PUNAINEN PUNAINEN hissi EMMA Espoo Museum of Modern Art Exhibition center WeeGee, Ahertajantie 5, Tapiola + 358 (0)9 8165 7512 www.emma.museum Guided tour reservations in advance only. Mon–Fri, 9.00–12.00. Tel. +358 (0)9 8163 0493. EMMA shop ILME-paja Open Tues, Thu, Fri 11–18 Wed 11–20 (free entry 18–20) Sat, Sun 11–17 WeeGee-ticket (5 museums) 10/8 € Visitors under 18 and over 70 years are admitted free. YANG FUDONG YANG FUDONG Busses from Kamppi, Helsinki: 106 and 110 Become an EMMA fan Besides guided tour services, EMMA also provides events, workshops, lectures, teaching materials and other projects. To take full advantage of all the special programmes check out EMMAs website. Exhibition Centre WeeGee (09) 8163 1818 EMMAn tukijat