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Sunday, October 6, 2024 |
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The Musee d'art Contemporain de Montréal Presents Today Vik Muniz Exhibition: Reflex |
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Vik Muniz, Double Mona Lisa (Peanut Butter and Jelly) (After Warhol), 1999, Cibachrome print, 121,9 x 152,4 cm. Courtesy Sikkema Jenkins & Co., NYC.
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MONTRÉAL, CANADA.- Peanut butter and jam, chocolate, sugar, wire, dirt and diamonds are just a few of the astonishing range of materials used by artist Vik Muniz in the images he produces and then photographs. In a Québec and Canadian first, the Musée dart contemporain de Montréal presents Vik Muniz: Reflex from October 4, 2007 to January 6, 2008.
Since the mid-1990s, Brazilian artist Vik Muniz has earned an international reputation for the photographic pieces he creates out of everyday materials. These images, inspired by current events, art history or famous figures, are familiar yet enigmatic. Initially taking the form of witty visual statements, his works question the way visual information is constructed, presented and then perceived by the viewer.
The exhibition contains 110 photographs, from 1988 to the present, from 27 series, including: Best of Life (1988-1990) famous pictures from Life magazine drawn from memory and then photographed and reprinted; Equivalents (1993) simulations of cloud formations, made with lumps of cotton, inspired by Alfred Stieglitz cloud studies; Pictures of Thread (1995-1999) landscapes by Corot, Constable, Ruisdael and others, reproduced using thousands of metres of thread; Sugar Children (1996) portraits of children of Caribbeansugar cane workers, drawn in sugar; Pictures of Chocolate (1997-2001) re-creations, in chocolate syrup, of well-known images such as Hans Namuths portrait of Jackson Pollock working on a drip painting; Earthworks(2002-2005) large-scale line drawings in the earth or tabletop replicas, inspired by land art; Pictures of Color (2001) arrangements of Pantone paint chips to create the illusion of digital images with a pointillist look; Pictures of Magazines (2003-2005) portraits and famous artworks reproduced with millions of circular pieces of paper punched from magazines; Monads(2003) images created from figurines and plastic toys; Pictures of Diamonds (2004) portraits of stars fromHollywoods golden age, like Elizabeth Taylor, produced out of diamonds; Pictures of Junk(2005) large-scale reconstructions of famous paintings, such as Caravaggios Narcissus, made with recycled materials; Pictures of Pigment(2005) masterpieces by Monet and Gauguin re-created in bright coloured pigment and blown up to monumental scale
VIK MUNIZ - Vik Muniz was born in 1961 in São Paulo, Brazil. He attended art classes in high school but did not go on to college. Instead, he plunged into the world of advertising, which left him with a lingering interest in the power and manipulation of images. He moved to the United States in 1984, and settled in New York in 1986. In 1988, having lost his copy of the book The Best of Life, he began drawing his favourite images from memory, and then photographingthem. The questions this exercise raised about the nature of perception and the role of photography prompted him to focus on what the well-known art historian Ernst Gombrich termed the art of illusion. Muniz has worked in photography ever since, producing an incredible body of work that probes the nature of visual representation and allows him to create, as he says, the worst possible illusion. After an initial moment of recognition, the viewer quickly realizes that the images are not what they first seemed.
Since 1989, Muniz has exhibited widely, with solo exhibitions in highly prestigious institutions in New York, São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Barcelona, Houston, Santiago de Compostela, Rome, Madrid and Dublin. He took part in the 24th Bienal de São Paulo in 1998, and represented Brazil at the 49th Venice Biennale in 2001. He now divides his time between Rio de Janeiro and New York.
Muniz illusions have won over critics and public alike. Time Magazine rated the artist as one of the Leaders of the New Millennium and The New York Times recommended his work as a sure-fire antidepressant, describing it as an idea wrapped up in surprise and laughter! Come see if its infectious
Vik Muniz: Reflex was organized by the Miami Art Museum, Florida, with support from MAMs Annual Exhibition Fund. Additional support was provided by Duggal Visual Solutions. Peter Boswell, Assistant Director for Programs and Senior Curator at the MiamiArt Museum, curated the exhibition. Sandra Grant Marchand, curator at the Musée d'art contemporain, organized the Montréal presentation.
The Musée d'art contemporain is a provincially owned corporation funded by the Ministère de la Culture, des Communications et de la Condition fémininedu Québec. It receives additional funding from the Department of Canadian Heritage and the Canada Council for the Arts, as well as from Lichen Communications.
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