Rage
Ensemble
RAGE
This notion came to mind when pairing Vlassis Caniaris, Jef Geys and Cady Noland.
Rage is often perceived as a blinding feeling, and rightly so, when its cause nor aim are understood. But rage can also become an explosive creative social power, reversing feelings of helplessness. If this hitting power is translated into artistic mediums and practices, it may offer not only a shared focus but also a shared intensity; art as a combustion engine.
Aspects of Racism by Caniaris combines a narrative dimension – colours of skin – with ta shocking line up of feet, that appear to have been cut off, Geys evokes the primary colours and lets the biblical warning of God fall from them, Noland punctures an iconic image of Kennedy murderer Lee Harvey Oswald and stuffs an American flag in the hole made over his mouth.
Items
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Oozewald
Cady Noland, Oozewald, 1989. Sculpture, aluminium, nylon, silver cloth, 180 x 90 x 73 cm.
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Aspects of racism II
Vlassis Caniaris, Aspects of racism II, 1970. Sculpture, plaster, 15 x 125 x 30 cm.
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De gevallen verwittiging ...
Jef Geys, De gevallen verwittiging [The Fallen Warning], 1985. Installation, steel, pigment powder, 400 x 700 x 200 cm.
Actors
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Vlassis Caniaris
Vlassis Caniaris From 1946 to 1950 he studies Medicine at Athens University while at the same time he attends painting lessons by Yannis
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Jef Geys
Après ses études à l'Académie des Beaux-Arts d'Anvers, Jef Geys (1934 - 2018) s'installe à Balen, toujours en Campine, où il enseignera l'art
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Cady Noland
Cady Noland (°1956) vient de Washington DC et vit désormais à New York. A la fin des années quatre-vingts, Noland était une représentante imp
