|
|
50th
Venice Biennale:
Art dances with politics at the Venice
Biennale
By
Catherine Szacka
Reporting
from Venice for ontheglobe.com
It was parching
heat and an almost unbearable humidity that invaded Venice this summer: but nothing
could hold back the crème de la crème of the world's artistic community at their
bi-annual gathering in the enchanting and serene city of canals and gondolas.
More than a simple artistic gathering, every two years the Venice Biennale literally
brings together artists from over 60 countries in what has become the most important
event for the contemporary arts.
It is a social, and even almost political
pulpit for contemporary cultural dialogue. This year, with the Biennale celebrating
its 50th year, organizers optimistically touted the event as the 'Mecca of all
exhibitions.' However, notwithstanding the glitzy opening in June, this year critics
remained reserved, and the feeling in Venice was that even with all the hype,
they had been over-sold.
The Venice Biennale, the largest contemporary
art exhibition in the world, officially opened its doors June 12, under the theme
'Dreams and Conflicts: The Dictatorship of the Viewer.' The current director of
the biennale, Francesco Bonami, on the occasion of the 50th anniversary, looked
to creativity to illustrate the absurdity of war, violence and discrimination.
In a nutshell, it was a question of using creative forces to counter the folly
of world conflicts, and using the Biennale as a symbol and potential catalyst
for solutions.
All this, while maintaining a space for diversity, contradiction and a multiplicity
of viewpoints. This lofty adventure turned out to have perils of its own. Many
pseudo-diplomatic incidents and protests were the talk of the town, and there
was even dissatisfaction on the part of their much touted 'viewer'.
|
|
|
|
Hungary's
work of art at the 50th Venice Biennale was created by a team of two artists calling
themselves the "Little Warsaw Group," and was appropriately inspired by the theme
of the biennale: "Dreams and Conflicts." Little Warsaw, made up of 30-something
artists András Gálik and Bálint Havas, attempted to complete Queen Nefertiti's
bust, the most well known ancient Egyptian statuette housed in Berlin's Charlottenburg
Museum. Creating a body for the famous statuette was an attempt at confrontation
between ancient middle-eastern and modern western values, as well as artistic
concepts. 
"Little Warsaw Group" caused a
stir
In order to complete their project, supported by HUF 63 million
from the Hungarian Ministry of National Cultural Heritage, the two Hungarian artists
invited input from experts at the Charloottenburg museum, an institution housing
one of the most significant ancient Egyptian collections in the world, as well
as Hungarian Egyptologists.
Havas and Galik worked on the statue, Nefertiti's
body, in the impressive building of Divatcsarnok, a formerly glorious department
store that has been derelict for years. In February, the Government Asset Directorate
lent the building to the artists for the preparation and documentation period
of the exhibition. Through their work, the artists tried to give new meaning and
context to one of the most precious masterpieces of the Egyptian Amarna era. The
3,500 year-old clay and plaster sculpture depicting the wife of pharaoh Amenhotep
lV was unearthed in 1912, and found within the ruins of the workshop of Thotmas,
one of the oldest known sculptors.
Some argue that the statuette wasn't
meant to be a work of art on its own, but was more like a mannequin, created so
that the queen would not have to pose for the many sculptors who would model her
over and over again.
"Over
time, Nefertiti has become famous for embodying beauty in its purest forms, only
to reappear as an icon copied as jewelry, a post-card, a souvenir or even a modern-day
advertisement," says theorist Eszter Babarczy, a consultant of the project, "The
same as has happened to many other icons of ideal beauty, nowadays Nefertiti is
a celebrity, and the object itself hides behind the assumed beauty idol and significant
personality."
Visitors at the Biennale's Hungarian Pavilion can view
the sculpture and view film and photo documentation on assembly of the original
relic and body, which took place in Berlin at the end of May.
The works
of the Little Warsaw Group, formed some seven years ago, can also be found in
the MEO Contemporary Art Collection as well as in the collection of the Dunaújváros
Institute of Contemporary Art.