Rebecca Stevenson

For the third time MOGADISHNI has the great pleasure of presenting the British London-based artist Rebecca Stevenson (b. 1971) in the gallery where she will be exhibiting new works for the solo exhibition “Tempting Nature”.

Served up like dishes at a bizarre, rococo banquet, the work lures the eye and the senses. A candy-pink swan is all done up like a fantastic cake, sticky cherries tumbling from fine layers of flesh and feathers. A cute baby bear, straight out of a Disney movie, looks like he’s smiling up at the viewer, whilst the skin of his back unfurls to reveal peaches, berries and butterscotch flowers. Sugary surfaces look positively lickable, chocolate-coloured roses good enough to eat. Excessive and outrageous, sweet to the point of being toxic, the works seem to tempt the viewer to the visual consumption of something that is both pleasurable and poisonous.

In “Tempting Nature”, a selection of animals have been meticulously prepared for the delectation of the viewer. Exquisitely crafted, at once charming and disturbing, the material of each sculpted creature is teased open creating lush, coloured wounds and cavities, which are in turn stuck with exotic flora and stuffed with succulent fruit. The perversity of this process, like the twofold nature of the work, is reflected by the show’s ambiguous title.

To tempt can mean to allure or entice, but also to provoke, as in the English expression “Tempting Fate”. Read this way, “tempting nature” suggests a risky undertaking on behalf of the artist, an absurd intent to imitate or improve upon nature. Stevenson’s work recalls forms and practices which use painstaking processes to mimic or refine the natural – stuffed animals, wax flowers, botanical illustrations, still life, genetic modification – forms that, whether employed in the name of art or science, reveal an obsession with pinning things down, like a row of butterflies in a frame.

Unlike the dead hares and game birds routinely draped across still life paintings, Stevenson’s animals are resolutely animate, even perky. The disjunction between this and their wounded, unravelled state is disconcerting. Whilst referring to scientific representations of the natural world, these works eschew taxonomy, and elude description or containment. Hybrid and chimerical in nature, they embody a specific otherness that relates to the ungovernable processes of nature itself: growth, replication, transformation.

Mogadishni

Cecilia Westerberg


Certain movies leave unforgettable traces in our memory – or do they?
– What do we actually remember when a movie makes an impression on us?

ROOM I
Cecilia Westerberg takes Boris Pasternak’s partly autobiographical novel Dr. Zhivago as her point of departure in her solo exhibition – Looking for Lara – and works with different aspects of displacement in the individual and collective memory. In the first part of the exhibition Cecilia Westerberg takes her starting point in a number of interviews, with people who have seen the classical film Dr. Zhivago from 1965. Westerberg examines, through simple questions about which scenes, figures or things that has made the greatest impression, how our memory of Dr. Zhivago is part of our collective image-bank and therefore collective memory. And at the same time is an entirely different part of our individual memory. In the first room of the exhibition Cecilia Westerberg is showing oil paintings with scenes from Dr. Zhivago. The scenes are chosen partly from the answers from the interviews.

ROOM II
In the second room of the exhibition Cecilia Westerberg takes her point of departure in her own journey to Russia and focuses on the interaction between fiction and reality. In Spring 2008 Cecilia Westerberg traveled to Peredelkino, where Boris Pasternak lived and wrote the book Dr. Zhivago. In this part of the exhibition Westerberg once again focuses on how fiction meets reality. This time though, it’s through her own experience of the odyssey from (film) fiction to reality – and finally her meeting with Russia. Westerberg especially focuses on her experience of the Americanized film version of Dr. Zhivago and a contemporary Russia year 2008. The account of Westerberg’s journey has turned into a video, oil paintings and aquarelles from Moscow, which will be shown in the second room of the exhibition.

The film Dr. Zhivago is based on a book by the Russian author Boris Pasternak. In 1958 he received the Nobel Price in Literature for this book.
Dr. Zhivago is no. 36 in the American Film Academy’s Top 100 in the last 100 year.

Cecilia Westerberg (1967) works with video/ -animation, paintings and drawings. Cecilia has previously worked with movies as a thematically starting point, for instance at her latest solo-exhibition in Frankfurt, spring 2008. Here Andrei Tarkovskys war movie Ivan’s Childhood (where World War II is portrayed though the eyes of a child) was her starting point. Cecilia has exhibited in several international exhibitions ex. In South Korea, France, Germany, Great Britain, She is currently participating in the Film Festival NU in Malmö, Sweden.

Bendixen

Adam Jeppesen


peter lav PHOTO GALLERY, Copenhagen, proudly presents the exhibition
 
Adam Jeppesen
Saimaa
14 August – 20 September
 

 
The opening show takes place on 14 August from 17 to 20. 
 
With his exhibition, Saimaa, Adam Jeppesen presents new photographs as well as the video installation “One – Video for 3 Screens”. Jeppesen’s book Wake (Steidl Publishing) is also shown at the exhibition for the first time.

PL Gallery

MOMENT


Berit Dröse, Anders Reventlov Larsen, Misja Thirslund Krenchel, Sophia Maria Seitz-Rasmussen, Mikael Madsen

Charlotte Fogh

FIVE2TWELVE


Gene Hathorn and Marco Evaristti, 2008. Draft.
Evaristti´s visit to Gene Hathorn and his involvement in helping Hathorn to a fair trial, is the basis for this 1 to 1 exhibition – the meeting with Hathorn and the work that has evolved from this.

At the same time the exhibition on a larger scale comments on the institution of the death penalty, the systematized killing and elimination of those considered a society menace.

FIVE2TWELVE is a humanistic comment, drawing attention to the individuals that are put away and forgotten until their execution day. Death by then, after years of waiting under dehumanizing circumstances, in its own absurd way, can seem like the most humane thing to do.

The exhibition complements a fashionable fashion show held August 9th in Skuespilhuset at 8.00 PM.

A collection of clothes designed by Evaristti for the death row prisoners to wear on their execution day, will be presented. – If we kill them, then let´s do it in style, is the absurd comment Evaristti makes to the absurdity of the institutionalized killing.

NB ! Tickets for the fashion show should be requested at malou@evaristti.com

Any profit from the exhibition at Martin Asbæk Projects will go to Hathorn´s appeal and a new and fair trial, and supplementary income to the relatives of victims and offenders.

Special opening and live music by Kenneth Thordal
Saturday August 9th at 9.30 PM at Martin Asbæk Projects

Martin Asbæk