Loss of Control: Crossing the Boundaries to Art from Félicien Rops to the Present

Print E-mail
Written by Hans Roman   
Monday, 25 January 2010 00:55

Jacques Charlier - Stamp Belgique - Belgie, 2000 - Briefmarke, Reproduktion, 53 x 43 cm. - Foto: Laurence Charlier Copyright: Jacques Charlier

HERFORD, GERMANY.- In his extensive farewell exhibition at the Marta Herford Museum, founding director Jan Hoet presents a multiplicity of artistic perspectives and aspects on the theme of loss of control: “Loss of Control: Crossing the boundaries to art from Félicien Rops to the present. Obsession, sexuality, madness and death – the continuing exchange between art and life is the theme of the exhibition LOSS OF CONTROL.  After an eight-year engagement as the inspirational founding director of the Marta Herford museum, Jan Hoet is saying farewell with a show comprising over 400 works. All the pieces speak about the artistic search for authentic means of expression above and beyond societal norms, and convey in unprecedented depth the varying aspects of loss of control, boundary crossing, and madness.

“Losing control can mean losing control over one’s own self and expressing the rigid and constraining limits of our lives in images that reveal obsession, repression, and social taboo. Control implies exposing yourself to challenges, that you get to know the inner constraints, fears, passions, and impositions with which people – not just artists – have to live and work today.” Jan Hoet, on Loss of Control

Félicien Rops - Pornokrates,1878 Pastel, Kreide, 31,8 x 21,6 cm. Courtesy Musée provincial Félicien RopsSocial taboos and repressed desires that we have internalised all through our lives, return here in fears, fantasies and passions, in the shapes of hysterical bodies and dissolve the boundaries of the perceptions that hold us under control. LOSS OF CONTROL undertakes to shake up our perception of art, rather than art itself.” (Jacques Charlier)

Félicien Rops - The centrepiece of the exhibition is a series of works by the Belgian symbolist Félicien Rops (1833-1898), drawn from all periods of his career. Rops – simultaneously a painter, lithographer, draughtsman, illustrator and engraver – was one of the foremost artists of the late 19th century. His work railed against the bourgeoisie and their culture of taboos, with its narcissistic fixation on the outward appearance of things. His frequently satirical works caricature the morals and mores of his time. Women, in Rops’ work, appear as demonic and powerful figures, laden with satanic and sexual overtones, they epitomise the decadent lusts of the bourgeoisie. Rops employed shock as an aesthetic experience, to shatter convention. The images of the sexualised bodies of women led his contemporaries to examine their own unconscious desires.

Jacques Charlier - The contemporary Belgian artist Jacques Charlier (b. 1939) shares Rops’ desire to goad the observer into far-reaching self-examination. Charlier prefers working between disciplines and media. He is equally at home with painting, photography, music, writing, sculpture and installations as he is with comic-book art. The Belgian artist has always cast a mischievous-subversive eye over the world of art. In his works – in which the dramatisation of the female always plays a central role – he references, caricatures, queries and repudiates the artistic avant-garde and in so doing creates his own work which parodies the modern

Art and psychiatry - LOSS OF CONTROL is further accompanied by other independent visual worlds in which the historical tension that has always existed between art and psychiatry is made manifest: the psychiatrist Jean-Martin Charcot’s famous documentary photography of Parisian mental patients, selected works from the Prinzhorn collection, the University of Heidelberg and from the Brussels-based ART EN MARGE collection, works from Adolf Wölfli, Hans Bellmer, Louise Bourgeois, Henri Michaux, Jean Dubuffet, Antonin Artaud and many other artists from the Art Brut movement.

The neurologist and physician Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) published L’iconographie photographique de la Salpêtrière (The Photographic Collection of the Salpetrière Hospital, 1876-1877), a series of black-and-white photographs showing women in the throes of fits of hysteria. The generally accepted psychiatric image of hysteria was at that time associated with female sexuality and an aberration of the soul, associated with the powers of the devil.

Francis Picaba ' Hera ' Oil on CanvasThe effect of Charcot’s striking images went far beyond their documentary and medical significance: Félician Rops and the artists of the Surrealist movement who found in the subconscious the source of artistic creation, and who saw in madness a metaphor for absolute freedom, were, apparently, inspired by them. In Les Jeux de la Poupée (Doll’s Games, 1949) Hans Bellmer (1902-1975) created a fetishistic doll, whose anatomy with its unforseen possibilities for dislocation typified human desire. Louise Bourgeois’ (b. 1911) famous sculpture Arch of Hysteria (1993), by showing a male body in the most-recognised poses of Charcot’s patients, critically reflected the vulnerability and strength of the women in the photographs.

Prinzhorn Collection and Art Brut - In 1919 the German psychiatrist and art historian Hans Prinzhorn (1886-1933) was charged with collecting and analysing photographs of mentally ill patients. His interest lay in works of art that had an honest, spontaneous, creative origin. His 1922 book Bildnerei der Geisteskranken (Artwork of the Mentally Ill) marked a turning point in the history of ‘outsider’ art, and bestowed artistic worth on certain works by mentally ill patients. LOSS OF CONTROL contains selected works from the distinguished Prinzhorn collection.

In his search for an anti-cultural position the French artist Jean Dubuffet (1901-1985) coined the term Art Brut in 1944. Dubuffet collected works from the patients of psychiatric clinics alongside those from spiritualist mediums. He investigated works by prisoners and by those cut off from society, and brought into focus the isolation and marginalization of cultural and artistic positions. In an imagined dialogue with the great Belgian symbolist Rops, the exhibition also reveals the positions of further artists of the 20th and 21st centuries. Works by Jörg Immendorff, René Magritte, Bjarne Melgaard, Yue Minjun, Tracey Moffatt and Francis Picabia will be on display.
LOSS OF CONTROL has been made possible by the prestigious loans provided by the Musée Félicien Rops in Namur, the Musées Royaux des Beaux Arts de Belgique, from the Collection of the Musée Royal de Mariemont, Morlanwelz, the Bibliothèque Royale de Belgique, the Collection de l’Art Brut, Lausanne, the Musée Villeneuve d’Ascq Collection, the ABCD Collection, Paris, the Procreart, Aarschot Collection, the Fondation Dubuffet, Paris and the Adolf Wölfli Foundation, Kunstmuseum Bern as well as from many other private collections.

The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue in three languages with a foreword by Jan Hoet and contributions by Jacques Charlier, Véronique Carpiaux, Carine Fol, Michael Kröger, Pierre Sterckx and Detlef Petry. The catalogue is available at the museum.


Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~