Mauritius. Aerial ViewMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Here the citizen does the talking about the country himself; the stranger is not asked to help. You get all sorts of information. From one citizen you gather the idea that Mauritius was made first, and then heaven; and that heaven was copied after Mauritius. Another one tells you that this is an exaggeration…
[Mark Twain, Following the Equator, 1897]
From One Citizen You Gather an IdeaMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
The first national Pavilion of the Republic of Mauritius at the Venice Art Biennial, 9th May - 22nd November 2015, is based on a dialogue between Mauritian and European artists. Mauritius is a fusion of cultures, languages and ethnicities, with its population made of Indian, African, Chinese and European descendants; the co-presence of temples, churches and mosques in every town of this island nation reveals this diversity.
In the Main Hall of the Pavilion of Mauritius, Palazzo FlanginiMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Virtually uninhabited until the end of the 16th century, the island was then ruled by the Dutch, French and British, before gaining independence in 1968. The newly born state has managed to maintain close ties with their former rulers, and also to establish an economic relationship with the USSR. Since 2000 the Ibrahim Index of African Governance has consistently rated Mauritius as the best-governed African nation in terms of safety, economic development and human rights.
In the Main Hall of the Pavilion of Mauritius, Palazzo FlanginiMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
However in art and culture, different sets of assessments apply; there is a short distance to questioning the value and relevance of the contemporary art output of a region in relation to the global artworld.
Artists, curators and the comissioner at the previewMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Commissioner: pARTage
Curators: OfRR: Alfredo Cramerotti & Olga Jürgenson
Participants: Alix Le Juge, Bik Van Der Pol, Djuneid Dulloo, Helge Leiberg, Kavinash Thomoo, Krishna Luchoomun, Neermala Luckeenarain, Nirmal Hurry, Olga Jürgenson, Römer + Römer, Sultana Haukim, Tania Antoshina, Vitaly Pushnitsky
At the previewMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Project advisers:
Alessio Antoniolli, Maria Arusoo, Pamela Auchincloss, Giorgia Mis, Dimitri Ozerkov, Georg Schöllhammer, Joanna Sokołowska, Olesya Turkina, Gabriella Uhl
Thanks to:
Fariba Derakhshani, Cédric Rabeyrolles Destailleur, Chris Hammond, Jean-Luc Maslin, Julie Penfold, Veronika Poptsova, Alice Pedroletti, John Prime, Aleksandra Smirnova, Maria Starkova-Vindman, Robert Vallois, Nicola Wright, Eduard Piel
With the support of:
Mondriaan Fund
Prince Claus Fund for Culture and Development
Galerie Vallois
Kavinash Thomoo
...again and again
‘... again and again’ by Kavinash ThomooMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Kavinash Thomoo, ...again and again, 2014, video projection
References the cyclical nature of samsara—a term for the unrelenting processes of creation, destruction, and regeneration expounded by metaphysical philosophies in Hinduism.
‘... again and again’ by Kavinash ThomooMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
The work demands an appreciation of process as well as the need to find beauty in destruction and the destroyed. ‘...again and again’ consists of painting, photography, and video, referring to the universe as a constant play of names and forms where destruction is neither negative nor an act of personal revolt.
Quantum Leap by Tania AntoshinaMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Tania Antoshina, Quantum Leap, 2015, Wood and upholstery fabrics, wool carpet, clock with a glass, 350 x 200 x 200 cm
We habitually tune our gaze in a certain way according to our notions. Yet, stereotypes involved in the perception of an object change in the course of history, and in this sense we can speak of a change in the object itself.
Quantum Leap by Tania AntoshinaMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
But will the object be the same still if we turn away from it for a moment and then glance at it again? And what about the moment when your eyes move away?
Nirmal Hurry
A Love Story Since 1982
A Love Story Since 1982 by Nirmal HurryMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Nirmal Hurry A Love Story since 1982. Papier-mâché, sequins, 120cm x120cm
In the name of convenience and egotism, masquerading as altruism, we allow the perpetuation of a series of matings and separations, immoral couplings that are self-serving and benefit only the parasites of the system.
A Love Story Since 1982 by Nirmal HurryMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Bik Van Der Pol
Little Liars
Little Liars (Kiev collection, models 1-6) by Bik Van der PolMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Bik Van der Pol, Little Liars (collection from Kiev, models 1-9), 2006/2007, Series of bronze casts from one-channel radios found in Kiev, Ukraine, dimensions variable (detail)
Little Liars was the (nick)name of Soviet radio receivers that would only receive a single frequency. A part of every household, these radios had to be on all day and were the only source of information, as the media was state controlled.
Little Liars (Kiev collection, models 1-6) by Bik Van der PolMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
The artist investigated how the events following the nuclear disaster in Chernobyl implanted themselves in the private and public life of the citizens in Ukraine. The casting process caused the original radios to disappear and turn into bronze, a material that is traditionally used to cast monuments and public sculptures.
Infinity VII by Alix Le JugeMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Alix Le Juge, Infinity VII, Oil on canvas, 140mm x 125mm
Infinity is a moment of tranquility in an ever accelerating world of the ephemeral.
Infinity VII by Alix Le JugeMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Within the dynamism of change and movement and one of constant connection,there is the need for a moment of nothingness—a moment suspended in time. Without ignoring the reality of life, my work is metaphysical in its striving to find an inner peace and well-being.
Fusionistas by Roemer + RoemerMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Römer + Römer, Fusionistas, 2015, Oil on canvas, 100 x 300 cm
On a former soviet military airport, not far from Berlin, the festival Fusion has taken place every summer since the middle of the 90s. The airplane hangars are transformed into stages and the party people can walk, dance, or chill on them.
Fusionistas by Roemer + RoemerMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
This painting is part of a cycle that reflects temporary social communities, which are building, for a defined time, a special kind of society with its own rules. In the case of the ‘hedonistic’ Fusion festival, a sociologist called it “Vacation Communism”.
Krishna Luchoomun
From Birth to Death
From Birth to Death by Krishna LuchoomunMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Krishna Luchoomun, From Birth to Death, 2002, Installation with clothes, rope, laundry basin, 1000 cm
Clothes, as a second skin, reveal a lot about ones personality, social status, tradition, and culture. Based on the life of my mother, I use clothes as a metaphor to trace the different stages of a Hindu woman’s life path from birth through childhood, youth, and adulthood ‘til death.
From Birth to Death by Krishna LuchoomunMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
This is the story of thousands of women worldwide who live a life on the wire. From birth to death their role is pre-determined, often with no choice but to play the different roles imposed by men.
Washing Line (2015) by Olga JürgensonMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Olga Jürgenson, Washing Line, Installation, 2015, Oil on canvas, 2 blank stretched canvases, pieces of melamine board, 160 x 300 cm
Olga Jürgenson’s work is a personal comment on Krishna Luchoomun’s ‘From Birth To Death’ and is based on a photograph from her archive, which she took in Venice in 2013 featuring a washing line above the flat she rented in Castello.
Washing Line (2015) by Olga JürgensonMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
On reflection it is clear that despite Olga's relatively traditional upbringing she had the opportunity, and will, to make major choices in her life, including wether to have or not to have children.
Neermala Luckeenarain
Back to the Family
Back to the family by Neermala LuckeenarainMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Back to the Family, 2011, Linocut, woodcut, silkscreen, thread chine collé, 200cm x 79 cm/78¾ x 31cm
A family is a rich unit full of love, affection, understanding, and interaction that is vital to our wellbeing and work.
Back to the family by Neermala LuckeenarainMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
It is very difficult to come back to that source once we move away—many people get dispersed, lost, and their feeling of unity disappears. One should not forget the culture he or she cultivates within such an environment.
Waiting by Vitaly PushnitskyMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Vitaly Pushnitsky, Waiting, 2015, Oil on canvas, paper, wood, metal fittings, 200 x 300 x 220 cm
We are all in a state of waiting, be it for the weather, a person, or death. What is common to all is that we are here but something important has not happened yet. It is a psychological state of hope, dread, and anticipation as well as simultaneously existing in three times – past, present, and future, plus the reality of continuing time.
Waiting by Vitaly PushnitskyMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Painting offers the possibility to capture different states, dynamics, and conditions as well as reflections and ex-planations with absolute clarity
Let there be love by DjuneidMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Djuneid Duloo, Let There Be Love, Let There Be Blood, 2013, Mixed media on canvas, 150 x 300 cm
Based upon the only surviving drawing of the artist at age thirteen, the Palace of Memories (a.k.a Let there be love...) is a painted polyglottic translation published 17 years later as a 300 minute performance to Gonzales’ Solo Piano. Compared to the original childhood drawing, the remixed adaptation is an orgy of post-creole diagram alphabets with memory fragments of fragrances.
Let there be love by DjuneidMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
The work projects a reverse image of all that has been left behind, not to be regained for generations except in memory or imagination
Geschraubt by Helge LeibergMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Helge Leiberg, Geschraubt, 2012, Bronze, 305 x 70 x 70 cm
Through the aesthetics of the dance gesture, the artist offers an invitation to ponder on the ambivalent attitude of devotion and repudiation.
Geschraubt by Helge LeibergMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Home by Sultana HaukimMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
Sultana Haukim, Home, 2011, Installation with birds' nests, wire and glue, 120 cm diameter
Symbol of warmth, protection, and love but also of fragility; birds’ nests are used to depict our fragile habitat, planet Earth. This fragility is accentuated mostly by our own actions: war, pollution, and over exploitation of natural resources.
Home by Sultana HaukimMauritius - Biennale Arte 2015
This work comments on the increasing inequalities dividing the world with borders into advanced societies, developing and third worlds, thus driving many to migrate using any possible means at the risk of their lives for the quest of a better and safer home.
Texts: OfRR: Alfredo Cramerotti & Olga Jürgenson (curators), artists
Photos: Alice Pedroletti, Olga Jürgenson, artists
Exhibit editing: Olga Jürgenson
Text editing: John Prime