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"The Subversive Charm of the Bourgeoisie": Van Abbemuseum.


Like many European and American museums, the Van Abbemuseum Van Abbemuseum is a museum of modern art located in the city of Eindhoven in the Netherlands on the east bank of the Dommel stream. History
The museum's core collection was begun in 1903 as a part of the private collection of a local cigar manufacturer, Henri van Abbe,
 was founded by a wealthy industrialist. In "The Subversive Charm of the Bourgeoisie," artworks and documents from the museum's collections were combined with recent works that are said to contain "bourgeois elements." In a Europe beset by discussions about (the need for) a renewal of bourgeois values or of a bourgeois lifestyle, such an exhibition is timely, although it turned out to be at least as confused as those discussions. In the media, the historical--and by now largely defunct--bourgeoisie is often turned into a caricature; various characteristics are abstracted from this cliche and turned into a lifestyle option to be embraced by those who can afford it, and into a set of behavioral norms to be imposed on the rest. The Van Abbe exhibition mirrored this decomposition of the bourgeois past into a set of floating signifiers: The bourgeoisie has left behind "elements" to be appropriated at will.

Among these elements are traditional media such as easel painting and drawing. In several spaces, recent paintings and drawings were combined with early-twentieth-century works in the same media. A rather successful juxtaposition was that of a detailed portrait by Dutch symbolist sym·bol·ist  
n.
1. One who uses symbols or symbolism.

2.
a. One who interprets or represents conditions or truths by the use of symbols or symbolism.

b.
 Jan Toorop Jean Theodoor "Jan" Toorop (December 20, 1858, Purworedjo, Java —March 3, 1928, The Hague) was a Dutch painter whose works straddle the space between the Symbolist painters and Art Nouveau. , Miss J. Janet Hall, 1899, with Iris van Dongen's large and dark mixed-media drawings replete with reminiscences of Pre-Raphaelite and decadent imagery. There were also representatives of the rappel a l'ordre realism of the interwar interwar
Adjective

of or happening in the period between World War I and World War II
 years; a 1939 painting of a black man titled Kid Oliveira (by a certain W. van de Plas) was an oddly convincing juxtaposition to Lukas Duwenhogger's elegantly hermetic hermetic /her·met·ic/ (her-met´ik) impervious to air.

her·met·ic or her·met·i·cal
adj.
Completely sealed, especially against the escape or entry of air.
 installation G--An Interior, 2001. The show's historical references oscillated between figurative works from the teens to the '30s and less obviously bourgeois abstract and Constructivist con·struc·tiv·ism  
n.
A movement in modern art originating in Moscow in 1920 and characterized by the use of industrial materials such as glass, sheet metal, and plastic to create nonrepresentational, often geometric objects.
 art. Silke Otto-Knapp's gold and silver paintings were exposed to the reflections cast by Laszlo Moholy-Nagy's Licht-Raum-Modulator, 1922-30, becoming mere screens for Moholy's dancing lights; rather more convincing was the juxtaposition of Mondrian's sparse Composition No. II, 1930, with a large Pierre Klossowski Pierre Klossowski (1905 – August 12, 2001) was a French writer, translator and artist.

Born in Paris, Pierre Klossowski wrote full length volumes on the Marquis de Sade and Friedrich Nietzsche, a number of essays on literary and philosophical figures, and five novels.
 drawing, Roberte et les collegiens V (vision du Professeur Octave), 1976, and a carpet by Paulina Olowska (Warsaw Rug, 2005), whose grinding, interlocking interlocking /in·ter·lock·ing/ (-lok´ing) closely joined, as by hooks or dovetails; locking into one another.
interlocking Obstetrics A rare complication of vaginal delivery of twins; the 1st
 forms lay bare modernism's often repressed re·pressed
adj.
Being subjected to or characterized by repression.
 libidinal pulse.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Reducing its historical referents to so many nostalgic retro signs, the show can be seen as a plea for aesthetics against conceptual practices that purged art of aesthetic qualities. Most convincing in this respect was a single painting by Karen Kilimnik, who wasn't even on the show's official roster of artists. Returning home from Washington through the jungle in fairmount park--Apollo's pavilion (cupid's folly), 2002, a dark landscape with a golden temple, did not really need the other paintings in the space; it constitutes a dialogue of its own. In brushstrokes that seem to work their way back from twentieth-century magazine illustration to Manet, Kilimnik revisits the nineteenth-century bourgeoisie's nostalgia for the grandeur of the aristocratic past, shamelessly hawking harmony. However, "bourgeois elements" can also be found in starkly different forms of contemporary art.

Unfortunately, the purely stylistic, reductivist approach to Constructivism constructivism, Russian art movement founded c.1913 by Vladimir Tatlin, related to the movement known as suprematism. After 1916 the brothers Naum Gabo and Antoine Pevsner gave new impetus to Tatlin's art of purely abstract (although politically intended)  in this exhibition precluded an investigation of the transformation of elements from bourgeois modernist aesthetics by such avant-garde movements, which radicalized art's promesse de bonheur by trying to reconstruct society along (in the final analysis) aesthetic lines. Intentionally or not, "advanced" forms of contemporary art that seek alternatives for the commodified objects also contain bourgeois elements: Many performative per·for·ma·tive  
adj.
Relating to or being an utterance that peforms an act or creates a state of affairs by the fact of its being uttered under appropriate or conventional circumstances, as a justice of the peace uttering
 and social practices show their debt to the nineteenth-century ideology of the aesthetic in their evocations of carefree sociability and spontaneous harmony. "The Subversive Charm of the Bourgeoisie" barely touched on the things that can be done with, and to, bourgeois elements.
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Author:Lutticken, Sven
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:4E
Date:Sep 1, 2006
Words:606
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