Through January 1, 2019
“Without a model, you are
nowhere. A nation that can’t make models is a nation that doesn’t understand
things, a nation that doesn’t live,” said visionary artist Bodys Isek Kingelez
(1948–2015). Based in then-Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of Congo), following
its independence from Belgium, Kingelez made sculptures of imagined buildings
and cities that reflected dreams for his country, his continent, and the world.
Kingelez’s “extreme maquettes” offer fantastic, utopian models for a more
harmonious society of the future. An optimistic alternative to his own
experience of urban life in his home city of Kinshasa, which grew exponentially
and organically with urban planning and infrastructure often unable to keep
step, his work explores urgent questions around urban growth, economic
inequity, how communities and societies function, and the rehabilitative power
of architecture—issues that resonate profoundly today.
Kingelez’s vibrant,
ambitious sculptures are created from an incredible range of everyday materials
and found objects—colored paper, commercial packaging, plastic, soda cans, and
bottle caps—all meticulously repurposed and arranged. While he didn’t travel
outside of Zaire until 1989, he was highly attuned to world events and deeply
concerned with social issues. The Scientific Center of Hospitalisation the SIDA
(1991), for example, references the AIDS crisis; Palais d’Hirochima (1991)
addresses the condition of postwar Japan; and U.N. (1995) attests to the
organization’s global peacekeeping efforts and the artist’s own sense of civic
responsibility. In the complex multi-building cityscape Kimbembele Ihunga
(1994), the artist reimagines his agricultural home village complete with a
soccer stadium, banks, restaurants, and skyscrapers. In Ville Fantôme (1996),
which will be accompanied by a Virtual Reality experience for visitors, the
artist has imagined a peaceful city in which doctors and police are not needed.
The first US retrospective
of Kingelez’s work, the exhibition spans his full career, from early
single-building sculptures, to spectacular sprawling cities, to futuristic late
works, which incorporate increasingly unorthodox materials. These rarely shown
works are a call for us all to imagine, in the artist’s words, a “better, more
peaceful world.”
This exhibition includes an
interactive virtual-reality experience that allows visitors to explore Ville
Fantôme, one of Kingelez’s large-scale city sculptures. Suitable for children
13 and up with adult supervision.
Organized by Sarah Suzuki,
Curator, with Hillary Reder, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Drawings and
Prints, The Museum of Modern Art.
Exhibition design is
produced in collaboration with the artist Carsten Höller.
Special thanks to Jean
Pigozzi and CAAC—The Pigozzi Collection.
https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/3889?locale=es
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