terça-feira, 19 de agosto de 2008

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Female Trouble

The camera as mirror and stage of female projection

17th July to 26th October 2008


Pinakothek der Moderne
Barer Str. 40, 80333 München
T +49 (0)89 238050
info@pinakothek.de
www.pinakothek-der-moderne.de
Tues-Sun 10am - 6 pm . Thurs 10 am - 8 pm


Artists represented in the exhibition include:
Diane Arbus | Gertrud Arndt | Marta Astfalck-Vietz | Monica Bonvicini | Claude Cahun | Sophie Calle | Julia Margaret Cameron | Comtesse de Castiglione | VALIE EXPORT | Nan Goldin | Lady Clementina Hawarden | Florence Henri | Hannah Höch | Birgit Jürgenssen | Jürgen Klauke | Astrid Klein | Germaine Krull | Nikki S. Lee | Sarah Lucas | Urs Lüthi | Robert Mapplethorpe | Björn Melhus | Ana Mendieta | Tracey Moffatt | Pierre Molinier | ringl + pit | Pipilotti Rist | Daniela Rossell | Tomoko Sawada | Cindy Sherman | Katharina Sieverding | Mathilde ter Heijne | Wanda Wulz | Francesca Woodman.

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Since the invention of photography more than 170 years ago it has been largely women who have used this technical medium to project themselves through role playing and masquerading. As well as the experimental urge to constantly recreate ones ego, the camera has also served as a means of calling into question clichés of female representation. Playing with the image of the eternally feminine was and remains a discourse with gender identity, its social and political definitions and reaching beyond them.

The exhibition focuses on contemporary women artists such as Cindy Sherman, Sarah Lucas, Monica Bonvicini and Pipilotti Rist, who with the aid of photography and video art investigate the female image. The artists explore the question of what image patterns the media age employs for portraying femininity and how these images determine perceptions of women. At the same time, they deconstruct by humorous, ironic and provocative means the traditional iconography of portraying women in the Western world and develop alternative images that postulate new forms of representation, which are at times aggressive and strident, at others subtle and devious.

Interest in the discourse with female imagery is not an exclusively post-modern issue. As far back as the 19th and early 20th century, women such as Countess Castiglione, the Surrealist Claude Cahun and female artists of the avant-garde discovered photography as a means of experiencing their ego in many different roles and exposing stereotype projections of femininity through masquerading. Review of history shows how contemporary women artists have followed on from their predecessors by continually returning to individual motifs and themes and extending and varying them over generations.


© 15.07.08 Photography-now
www.photography-now.com


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