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Mária Čorejová: Výstava Stojaté vody v galérii Remont, Belehrad
Mária Čorejová STANDING
WATERS
Cooperation Miriam Šebianová
Curator Miroslava Urbanová
Opening: June 12, 2018, 19:00, Remont Gallery,
The solo show of Mária Čorejová Standing
Waters at Remont Gallery in Belgrade presents a selection from her latest
drawing series Days of Anger
(2015-2016), Brave World (2016-2017) and Oh
Your God (2017-2018), together with the objects by architect Miriam Šebianová
Sweet Home (2017). In her works, the
artists continuously questions the traces of the persisting and the new dogmas
within the neoliberal and neoconservative environment of the former Eastern
Bloc.
Mária
continues to develop her authorial programme prevalently in the technique ink
on paper. On the white surface of the paper sheet the objects are assembled in
such constellations of which one exclusive interpretation would put us in
danger of getting stuck in the shallows. However, she provides us with some
anchors to spot an undistorted reflection of her critical input.
Days
of Anger, referring with its title to the classic of
Slovak literature, consist of representations of both everyday objects and
universal symbols of our cultural circle, for example bread or boat. Things
which are burnt, burning, flowing, or are drowning in themselves, produce the
instant feeling of worry about the change of their state and/or state of
matter. Mária
adapts her technique –
this time very soft pencil drawing and scratched black wax – so that she reaches more dramatic contrast,
feeling of loss of security after being hit by imaginary lightning of anger.
Metal construction of Miriam's objects called
Sweet Home, shaped as an archetypal
house, delineates in the third dimension a certain physical and ideological
space, in the similar way like Mária's
solid, but still fluid drawing line. Borders of this space are interrupted with
motifs from Mária's
usual repertoire, for example balloon or animals, which are searching for their
place in the framework of unclear borders between private and public space.
Artists are inviting us to take a look at their relationship, its sweet ups and
downs, its fragility similar to the sugar walls of one of these little
mansions.
Christian symbolism and the church
architecture emerge in Mária's
œuvre regularly, last
time in the series Stations of Crisis.
In the newer Brave World the artist
directs our gaze into the interior of sacral architecture: to the naves,
transepts and chapels of the cloisters and cathedrals from Middle Ages. These
are without doubt the most monumental material and artistic manifestations of
the Christian tradition in Europe. She brings various strange objects and phenomena to these spaces and therefore
disturbs the genre impression of the drawings. Indeed, these depictions of
church interiors denote more metaphysical than physical space, but deprived of
its divine aura represented by the light coming through the colourful glass
windows. In these mute skeletons are the fragments of the secular world trapped
in the iconic black matter/fluid. The artist shifts the discussion to the
framework of thinking about systems (religious, social, cultural), about their
borders, confrontations and overlaps. According to legends, at the beginning of
the world there was light. And at the beginning of the art/painting there was a
line drawn alongside the shadow.
Further, in the latest series Oh Your God appear various motifs from
the older series on one sheet of paper - such as stuffed animal trophy,
medieval church or ancient temple. They are carefully arranged in an unreal
setting, though quoting well-known spaces. They create a labyrinth of references
pointing back to the roots of our culture. These places and objects are
seemingly struck and overgrown by expanding trees, when so-called nature
confronts so-called culture. Their physical and thematic overlappings vary from
the bloody deer decoration on the walls of Bratislava's castle through the
associations such as that of the mythical wooden origin of the first
architecture to the thematization of the unscrupulous wood harvesting fueled by
greed in today's Slovakia.
What is often being highlighted,
is a certain surreal impression of Mária's. This can be observed not only in the
treating of the picture plane and perspective, but first of all in the strange
ensambles of places and objects. However, these predominantly non-figurative
groups are an echo to current societal events. Mária's drawings are in this sense mimicking the
surreal feeling of today's world of fake news, the rise of far-right and
bigotry in Central European region and are to certain extent acting as the
exact illustrations to the distorted history of the region.
Mária Čorejová
Celkový rozpočet:
1 280,00 €
Výška podpory:
1 080,00 €