At the moment the French Institute in Barcelona is presenting El perímetre intern
(The internal perimeter), a group exhibition curated by Andrea
Rodríguez Novoa and Veronica Valentini. The dozen or so works, by
Spanish and French artists, presented in El perímetro interno
propose a reflection on the notion of limits (geographical, historical,
political, economic, social, cultural, personal…), their ambiguities and
their imprecisions.
Narrating stories, highlighting examples, indicating points of
confluence or carrying out small displacements are just a few of the
examples employed by these artists to explore this notion. Oriol
Vilanova takes a vitrine from the French Institute and deprives it of
its function, simply exhibiting it open. Through the image of a wax
cylinder, Dominique Hurth proposes a series of non-linear narratives.
“Let hope predominate without being too visionary” is the message that
Anna Moreno wrote on the placards that she showed in the world
demonstration of 15 October 2011 in Barcelona and Vienna. A disturbing
and undecipherable anonymous letter is the proposal by Audrey Cottin
that focuses on the limits of authorship. A photograph accompanied by a
Quahog shell are the elements that Aymeric Ebrard uses as a way of
trying to identify what constitutes forming part of a community. Fran
Meana presents an installation, with a slightly unstable equilibrium,
where he compares images (and one ends up finding many common features)
related to North-American Land Art and workers revolts in the
dockyards of the northern Spain. Ariadna Parreu enters into the world of
desires and utopias, using scientific, geometric and telekinesic
references. Pauline Bastard reveals the mechanisms used to produce a
romantic sunset. Ryan Rivadeneyra relates, visually and literally, his
unsuccessful search for Tartessus, the mythical lost city. In their
film, Pythagore et les monstres, Louise Hervé and Chloé Maillet
transform the philosopher Pythagoras into the protagonist of a film with
numerous traits of a B series film. Through references to a story by
Lewis Carroll, Irene de Andrés constructs a perfect map, of which all
that is left is the frame. The complex history of Europe now transformed
into a huge tourist theme park is reflected in an installation, by Lúa
Coderch, in which an electric fan artificially blows up a bag from a
souvenir shop.
The internal perimeter shares approaches and concerns with another
project recently presented in la Capella that we commented on a few
weeks ago: La condició narrativa,
curated by Alexandra Laudo. Both propose a reflection related to a
specific theme and one that is relevant at the moment (one focuses on
the image and the narrative condition, while the other explores the
notion of limits and their imprecisions) and in this process of
reflection they also evidence other things: a certain generational
approximation of the artists (born in the decade of the eighties) who
work with a huge diversity of materials, though often in low-tech
formats; that they investigate, indicate and present facts or events
from the present and the past that make it possible to reflect on the
present; that they explain histories or construct situations and reveal
mechanisms.
And as we’re talking about generational themes, it’s worth
remembering that during the seventies, in a Barcelona still devoid of
contemporary art institutions (let’s not forget that the first, the
Fundació Joan Miró, was inaugurated in 1975), some of the most risky
artistic proposals took place in the foreign institutes in the city. The
Institut Français, the Istituto Italiano di Cultura, the
Goethe-Institut and the Institute of North American Studies were just a
few of the places where the works by conceptual artists were presented,
as well as the encounters, discussions and seminars that reflected on
the new role of art and artists.
I’m not sure if history is repeating itself, but it’s curious that
just when the artistic institutions in Barcelona seem to have lost their
way, some of the most interesting proposals are arising out of
independent initiatives, in foreign cultural institutes, artists’
studios and non-profit spaces. And the reasons for this are not to be
found solely in the cuts or the increase in VAT.
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