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Marion Baruch: Bomba
“Marion Baruch: Bomba” is the first institutional solo exhibition by Marion Baruch in Israel and in the region.
Marion Baruch, photo by Noah Stolz. Courtesy of Noah Stolz.
13 October 2022
14:00 – 19:00
Descrizione

It is the first institutional solo exhibition in Israel and in the region dedicated to Marion Baruch (*1929, Timișoara, Romania; lives and works in Gallarate, Italy). Versatile and idiosyncratic, spanning over seven decades, Baruch’s work represents a unique approach to formalism, due to its being deeply interdisciplinary. In the mid-1960s Baruch transitioned from painting to works in three dimensions that appropriate elements from fashion, graphic and product design, and commerce, effectively anticipating the emergence of installation art and Relational Aesthetics. A “global artist” with a “participatory practice” before such terms could be fully conceived, Baruch lived and worked in Romania, Israel – where she had her first solo exhibition at Micra Studio in Tel Aviv in 1953 – France, and Italy and created several bodies of work that would on the one hand reflect her position of total freedom toward any stylistic restrictions, and on the other hand possess the capability to function as a radar and capture ideas and tools – such as the Internet – that would become massively influential. From the outset, her practice has been rooted in a concern with contamination, while undergoing stylistic shifts: from expressive paintings to graphic art; from large metal sculptures to her seminal performative works Contenitore-Ambiente [environment-container] (1970) and Abito-Contenitore [container-dress] (1969-70); and from her layered project Ultramobile – a group of “non-objects” designed by artists such as Man Ray, Meret Oppenheim, Roberto Matta and Allen Jones – to the series “Rembrandt” (1978-82). The 1980s saw her practice shift to a playful and yet critical approach toward the field of art, and specifically to the art market – epitomized by her decision to channel her artistic action through a company called “Name Diffusion” that she registered at the chamber of commerce. The consequential 15 years, her “Parisian phase,” was characterized by a clear desire to use the medium of installation, Internet art and language to address social and political issues. During this phase Name Diffusion evolved, becoming the umbrella name for works created with the involvement of the community of the sans-papiers (illegal immigrants) with whom Baruch clearly identified. The most recent phase of Baruch’s practice is characterized by the reuse of textile waste from the prêt-à-porter industry, employed by the artist to create a body of work that renewed her conviction that formalism is never disconnected from issues that are either conceptual, autobiographical, existential or philosophical. Two prime examples from this body of work are presented for the first time on this occasion: Passage Paysage and Cloud Architecture (both 2021). Opening a new phase in her work is Bomba (2022), created especially for this exhibition and consisting for the first time of a monochromatic composition of fabric ‘limbs,’ clothes that were once the artist’s own.

CCA Tel Aviv-Yafo
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at the Rachel & Israel Pollak Gallery 2a Tsadok Hacohen St., Tel Aviv-Yafo, Tel Aviv, Tel Aviv-Yafo, Tel Aviv-Yafo
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