6/7
Goshka Macuga
Aby Warburg on Madness and Ritual, set for Scene 2, 2014 Tapestry, Edition of 5
270
× 366 cm
© Goshka Macuga
Courtesy Galerie Rüdiger Schöttle
Photo: Wilfried Petzi
5/7
Goshka Macuga
Marcel Duchamp, 2014
wood chair, steel core with appliqué, painted
Edition of 3
120 x 50
× 50 cm
© Goshka Macuga
Courtesy Galerie Rüdiger Schöttle
Photo: Wilfried Petzi
4/7
Goshka Macuga
Madness and Ritual, 2014
Collage on C-Print, Edition of 5
48
× 66 cm
© Goshka Macuga
Courtesy Galerie Rüdiger Schöttle
Foto: Wilfried Petzi
3/7
Goshka Macuga
Aby, 2014
Aludibond, steel core with appliqué, painted
Edition of 3
170 x 100 cm
© Goshka Macuga
Courtesy Galerie Rüdiger Schöttle
Photo: Wilfried Petzi
2/7
Goshka Macuga
Preparatory Notes, 2014
HD Single channel video projection with overlay animation, 50 min.
Edition of 5
© Goshka Macuga
Courtesy Galerie Rüdiger Schöttle
video
Preparatory notes - selected clips1/7
Goshka Macuga
Backdrop. Living room, 2014
Tapestry, Edition of 5
273
× 442 cm
© Goshka Macuga
Courtesy Galerie Rüdiger Schöttle
Photo: Wilfried Petzi
"Madness and Ritual" is the title of Goshka Macuga's fourth exhibition at Galerie Rüdiger Schöttle. This exhibition seeks to put the mental state of the art world to the test and subjects the gray area between madness and mental health to close examination.
On the occasion of the 8th Berlin Biennale, Goshka Macuga has taken on a new genre by staging a play for theater. Another play sparked Macuga's project: "Hamburg Conversations on Art and Culture," penned by the renowned art historian Aby Warburg (1866–1929) for a family reunion, is a comedy exploring a dispute between the conservative and the radical wing of the art scene at the time. Warburg's material prompted Goshka Macuga to write an amusing analysis of today's art world.
Her play, performed in Berlin – consisting in equal parts of choreography, lecture, and performance – is the inspirational basis for the exhibition at Galerie Rüdiger Schöttle. Many of the works on view are closely connected to the performed play; the exhibition emphasizes the medium of collage, which takes on two- and three-dimensional forms and culminates in a multicolored tapestry. The exhibition shows sculptures of the protagonists and a new video work which emerged from recordings of the play.
Goshka Macuga's works cannot be pinned down to a single medium, but rather a method which is connected to thorough research and which, therefore, frequently corresponds to historical and curatorial approaches. Goshka Macuga already dealt with Aby Warburg before, in her exhibition "I Am Become Death" (2008), specifically with his "Mnemosyne Atlas" and his writings. Macuga detects parallels to her own work in his way of working, his very unconventional approach, and his examination of the function of the predetermined contents of images.
Goshka Macuga, born in 1967 in Warsaw, lives and works in London. She is one of the preeminent figures of the artist generation who has generated strong signals in contemporary art by working retrospectively and by analyzing current events. Her tapestries, sculptures, installations, photography, collages, and films often question not only the presentation and production of art, but also curatorial practice, which she has adopted for her own work.
Macuga has been the subject of many international solo exhibitions: at the Tate Britain in 2007, the Whitechapel Gallery in London in 2008, the Kunsthalle Basel in 2009, the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis in 2012, the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago in 2014, and the Kunsthalle Lund in 2014. In 2006, she participated in the São Paulo Biennial, followed by the Liverpool Biennial in 2006, the Berlin Biennale in 2008, the Venice Biennale, and the Berlin Biennale again in 2014.
Her spectacular contribution to the Documenta 13 – a diptych consisting of monumental photorealistic tapestries – will long be remembered.
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