During the cultural city festival Antwerp Baroque 2018. Rubens Inspires, the M HKA, the Museum of Contemporary Art Antwerp, juxtaposes the spirit of the baroque masters with the vision of contemporary top artists. With the exhibition Sanguine/Bloedrood (Blood Red), curator Luc Tuymans aims to overwhelm the visitor by placing key works from the baroque of, among others, Francisco de Zurbarán and Caravaggio, in dialogue with works by classical contemporary masters, such as On Kawara and Edward Kienholz, as well as new works by contemporary stars such as Zhang Enli, Takashi Murakami, Michaël Borremans, Sigmar Polke and Tobias Rheberger. 

antwerpenbarok2018.be

Lili Dujourie

(c)image: M HKA
Stilleven [Still Life], 1976
Collage , 4 x ( 390 X 300 mm)
collage on paper

In the mid-1970s Lili Dujourie made the series of collages Still Life, to which these four works belong, the same period when she was making her video works. This work may be seen as between her early, minimalist-conceptual period and her later, more theatrical period. This transition is evident throughout Still Life: the compositions are intentionally minimalistic, but the creases, tears and overlaps also suggest a drama that makes us think of her later velvet sculptures. The collages are largely made of colored paper without further figurative elements, bonded to a white-paper background. As so often in her oeuvre, Dujourie’s use of the title Still Life is a reference to traditions from the history of art. Visually speaking, however, these abstract collages have little to do with the classical, figurative still life: they do not depict anything and display nothing other than their own forms. And still, the texture of the torn edges, the overlaps and use-of-color lend an impression of three-dimensionality, almost as in a painting. Moreover, just like the painters of still lifes, Dujourie shows much regard for texture, composition and material. In this way she joins a centuries-old tradition, albeit in her own particular manner.