KARLSRUHE.- From July 26 to November 9, 2014 the
ZKM | Karlsruhe will show a comprehensive retrospective of the work of French artist, writer and activist Jean- Jacques Lebel (*1936) one of the first to author Political Happenings. According to his friend Man Ray he triggered the association Lebel = Rebel in the 1960s. His actions, installations, sculptures, objects, paintings, videos and texts are in explicit rebellion against the terror of war and psychiatry, against the horror of colonialism, against a culture of self- inflicted stupidity and a society characterized by op- pression and racism. Therefore The Highest of All the Arts is Insurrection.
In addition to eight large scale installations shown together for the first time, in an exhibition space of 2000 square- meters the retrospective also shows some of the most important paintings, drawings and films by Jean-Jacques Lebel. It provides detailed insight into the work of this polymorphic and polysemic artist who lived and worked in close collaboration with the Dadaists, Surrealists and the poets of the Beat Generation.
Lebels work and influence extend over six decades. His earliest shown piece, a small painting entitled Medicin Man, is from 1951. In 2013 he created a labyrinth depicting and denouncing the torture of Iraqi war prisoners by American troops at the Abu Ghraïb prison in Bagdad.
In 2014 he produced, specially for the ZKM venue a film installation exploring the ideological and aesthetic link be- tween Nazi approved mainstream commercial cinema and Hitlers and Eva Brauns Home Movies.
Of international fame, described as a kaleidoscopic artist so goes the title of a doctoral thesis on Lebel (Sophie Delage: Jean-Jacques Lebel. Un artiste kaléidoscopique. Dissertation, Paris University, 2006) since his first exhibition (Galleria Numero, Florence, 1955) and starting with his first Happening (Venice, 1960), Lebel has made major contributions to the dynamics of the most lively counter-culture of our time Art Actionism. An associate of Brock and Vostell, Lebel is considered the initiator of Happenings in Europe a few years before Viennese Actionism.
With over 100 public activities, his epochal Festival de La Libre Expression (1964 till 1968) and the Festival International Polyphonix (from 1979), in which thousands of artists, poets, philosophers, filmmakers, musicians and activists from across the world and in many different idioms participated, Lebel was and remains one of the major impulses of topical artistic as well as political collective actions. His works have been shown in numerous solo and group exhibitions in many of the worlds most prestigious museums but, also, in underground venues.
Lebel calls for upheaval in countless texts, articles and poems. In his Actions he joined forces with some of the key artists and thinkers of his time. In the Grand Tableau Anti- fasciste Collectif, 1960, Lebel, Err , Enrico Baj, Roberto Crippa, Gianni Dova and Antonio Recalcati protested the Algerian War and its police operations, its torturing, its slave-owner-like saber-rattling patriotism hiding behind the Tricolore rag (Lebel). This collaborative work, measuring five by four meters, depicts the Algerian Djamila tortured by French paratroops and it included the famous Manifesto of the 121 anti-imperialist tract. . During the Anti-Procès in the Milan gallery Brera, in 1961, twenty policemen cut it down and carted it off. Charged with offending of Pope John XXIII and state religion, the painting disappeared into the Milan Questura for 27 years, only to reappear, seriously damaged, in 1988. Lebels insurgency has repeatedly provoked strong reactionary responses. Following his Happen- ing 120 minutes dédiées au Divin Marquis (Paris, 1966) photos of which are included in the Karlsruhe exhibition, he was accused of obscenity. His consistent logical reply was To- day, obscenity no longer lies in the sexual realm but in politics.
A Surrealist and friend of André Breton in his youth, Lebel later turned to the poets of the Beat Generation, Ginsberg, Corso, Burroughs, McClure, etc., whose works he translated and published. The exhibition he curated Beat Generation / Allen Ginsberg, held last year at the ZKM, along with four other international venues, bears testimony to his comprehensive knowledge of the inner workings of poetry and artistic creativity. As a personal friend of André Breton, Marcel Duchamp, Allan Kaprow, Félix Guattari and Gilles Deleuze, Lebel was and remains an agent of libertarian ethics as the basis of the social-subversive function assumed by all artists worthy of the name.
With this exhibition, artillery shell cases transformed be- tween 1914 and 1918 by anonymous hands return to Karlsruhe where they originated from. Throughout the course of the war on both French and German sides would sculpt from these shell cases vases, tankards, candlesticks, ash- trays, musical instruments and even opium pipes.
Thus, in the large space of this former Karlsruhe munitions factory, the current home of the ZKM, the exhibition will display all sorts of manufactured and transformed objects such as a reliquary in which a lit candle-stick which could double as a coffee-cup heater in the trenchs as the condemned warriors awaited their tragic death by mustard gas, bullet or bomb. Here, Jean-Jacques Lebel underscores the metamorphosis from instruments of horror to instruments of daily life , as is revealed in this exhibition with many such extraordinary examples.
Curator: Bernhard Serexhe