É«¿Ø´«Ã½

Press Release

Project Space: Stage and Twist É«¿Ø´«Ã½, Level 2

Project Space: Stage andÌýTwistÌý

Leap into the void after three seconds 2004 Ciprian Muresan CORE

Ciprian MureÅŸan
Leap Into the Void, After Three Seconds 2004
Courtesy Plan B, Cluj / Berlin and Nicodim Gallery, Los Angeles © Ciprian Mureşan

Stage and Twist brings together Polish artist Anna Molska and Romanian artist Ciprian MureÅŸan for their first exhibition in a London museum. The exhibitionÌýexamines the way twentieth century history is both re-staged and twisted by these artists as a means to engage critically with the present day. Rather than glorifying the past, Molska and MureÅŸanÌýuse history to question collective and individual experience in the post-Communism era, cheerfully accepting the failures and shortcomings of contemporary society. Organised in collaboration with the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw, Stage and Twist is the first exhibition to be held in the newly titled Project Space – formerly Level 2 Gallery – É«¿Ø´«Ã½â€™s dedicated space for emerging and recently established internationalÌýartists.

Anna Molska was born in Prudnik, Poland in 1983 and lives and works in Warsaw.Ìý Her films revisit the history of the avant-garde and its belief that art can improve society. Tanagram 2006-07, for example, depicts two semi-clad young men playing a large-scale version of the Chinese geometric puzzle of the same name. The men assemble large black puzzle pieces into a square on a white floor, alluding to Kasimir Malevich’s groundbreaking painting Black Square 1915. The exhibition also includes W=F*s (Work) and P= W;t (Power) 2007-08, a two-screen video installation which contrasts manual labour with mechanical power by juxtaposing a group of workers building a pyramidal structure out of scaffolding, with the high-velocity firing of a squash ball cannon. In doing so the artist calls into question the conditions of the collective and the role of the individual withinÌýit.

Ciprian MureÅŸan was born in 1977, and lives and works in Cluj, Romania. His works include video, sculpture and drawing, which often appropriate key works of modern art and literature and twist their meaning with subtle and ironic gestures. Leap Into the Void, After Three Seconds 2004 re-enacts Yves Klein’s iconic image of himself jumping from a ledge, but in MureÅŸan’s version the artist lies sprawled on the ground having hit the pavement three seconds after his leap. In comparison to Klein’s liberating artistic gesture, MureÅŸan reduces the act to its literal consequences and thereby highlights the precarious situation of artists in contemporary Romania. In a tribute to John Cage’s silent piece of music, 4’33’â¶Ä™ 2008 is a film which slowly moves through an abandoned factory for four minutes and thirty-three seconds, commenting on the decline of local industry in the wake of privatisation. Other works in the exhibition include Incorrigible Believers 2009, in which MureÅŸan ‘completes’ Franz Kafka’s unfinished novel The Castle, and °ä³ó´Ç´Ç²õ±ð… 2005, in which a young boy pours together Pepsi and Coke, playing with the codes ofÌýconsumerism.

The exhibition is curated by Capucine Perrot and Magda Lipska and is a collaboration between É«¿Ø´«Ã½ and the Museum of Modern Art inÌýWarsaw.

The Project Space series has been made possible with the generous support of CatherineÌýPetitgas.

For further press information and images please contact Kate Moores, Tate Press Office

Call +44(0)20 7887 8731ÌýÌýÌýÌý Fax +44(0)20 7887 8729ÌýÌýÌýÌý EmailÌýpressoffice@tate.org.uk

See also

Close