At the occasion of the 50JPG (50 Jours pour la photographie à Genève)
Romy Alizée / Nobuyoshi Araki / Jane Evelyn Atwood / Hélène Bellenger / Dorothée Elisa Baumann / Caroline Bernard / Gérard Berréby / Renate Bertlmann / Ursula Böhmer / Viktoria Binschtok / Mauren Brodbeck / Mara Catalán / Marina Cavazza & Giulia d’Anna Lupo / Florence Chevallier / Olivier Christinat / Nicolas Crispini / Bunu Dhungana / Mauricio Dias & Walter Riedweg / Christoph Draeger / Charles & Ray Eames / Sandrine Elberg / Hans-Peter Feldmann / Sabrina Fernández Casas / Sylvie Fleury / Enrique Fontanilles / Jaques Fournel / Linda Fregni Nagler & Michael Doser / Paul-Armand Gette / Nadia Granados / Vivienne Griffin / Christiane Grimm / Barbara Hammer / Heidi Hassan / Astrid Jahnsen / Nikola Jankovic & Sarah Vadé / Denis Jutzeler / Philipp Keel / Pierre Keller / Majida Khattari / Martin Kippenberger / Jürgen Klauke / Cyril Kobler / Amélie Labourdette / Jean-Jacques Lebel / Leigh Ledare / Eden Levi Am / Nicolas Lieber / Armin Linke / Fred Lonidier / Lozano Lee / Urs Lüthi / Manon / Edgar Martins / Angela Marzullo / Fabio Mauri / Michel Mazzoni / Susan Meiselas / Bjørn Melhus / Falk Messerschmidt / Boris Mikhailov / Carlo Mollino / Verita Monselles / Gianni Motti / Jean-Luc Moulène / Johan Österholm / Aurélie Pétrel / Walter Pfeiffer / Peter Piller / Roman Pyatkovka / Pierre Radisic / Catherine Radosa / Koka Ramishvili / Thomas Ruff / Gregor Sailer / Stuart Sandford / Viviane Sassen / Lina Scheynius / Laurent Schmid / Jo Spence / Jules Spinatsch / Annie Sprinkle & Beth Stephens / A.L. Steiner / Stanley Stellar / Clare Strand / Annelies Štrba / Jean Tinguely / Danila Tkachenko / Grazia Toderi & Orhan Pamuk / Nicole Tran Ba Vang / Patrick Tosani / Yves Trémorin / Jan van IJken / Liliane Vertessen / Gilles Verneret / Christian Waldvogel / Charles Weber / Barbara Wolff / Giovana Zuccarino
With the participation of more than 100 artists including : Nobuyoshi Araki, Renate Bertlmann, Nicolas Crispini, Mauricio Dias & Walter Riedweg, Charles & Ray Eames, Hans-Peter Feldmann, Sylvie Fleury, Pierre Keller, Armin Linke, Lee Lozano, Urs Lüthi, Manon, Susan Meiselas, Bjørn Melhus, Boris Mikhailov , Gianni Motti, Jean-Luc Moulène, Peter Piller, Walter Pfeiffer, Thomas Ruff, Gregor Sailer, Viviane Sassen, Lina Scheynius, Jo Spence, Jules Spinatsch, Grazia Toderi & Orhan Pamuk, Patrick Tosani, Christian Waldvogel…
The sixth edition of the 50JPG of the Centre de la photographie Genève will be held between 19 June and 25 August 2019. The main exhibition will aim to bring together Eros & Cosmos. Under the title OSMOSCOSMOS, it will highlight the link between these two universes, a connection that has been very little studied in our western cultures, probably too much influenced by monotheistic religions and the feelings of guilt developed in association with Eros, with the purpose of making the individual more subject to the ascendancy of the churches.
Jean-Pierre Vernant, a specialist in Greek antiquity, emphasizes that the sexualisation of the god Eros occurred at the moment when Uranus was castrated and withdrew from Gaia in pain to become the starry sky above our heads*. And for the philosopher Michel Onfray, referring to the Kama Sutra, sex is defined as follows: “...natural, attuned to the cosmos, never separated from the world, always there as a reminder of the bond between the parts of a greater whole”.**
A dozen of works establish this relationship between the two facets of OSMOSCOSMOS, such as Words and Stars by Grazia Toderi and Orhan Pamuk, or the contributions of Ursula Böhmer, Bunu Dhungana, Heidi Hassan, Eden Levi Am, Urs Lüthi, Boris Mikhailov, Johan Österholm, Thomas Ruff, Pierre Radisic, Catherine Radosa, Annie Sprinkle (with Beth Stephens), Christian Waldvogel and others.
OSMOSCOSMOS brings together contemporary photographic and videographic works as well as drawing on a variety of iconographic sources. As early as the 1970s several artists from among those selected radically questioned the definition of genres, and indeed the commercialisation of Eros, whether it be Manon, Jürgen Klauke, Renate Bertlmann, Natalia LL, Urs Lüthi, Barbara Hammer, Annie Sprinkle (with Beth Stephens) or Liliane Vertessen; at the same period others, such as Pierre Keller or Walter Pfeiffer, were laying claim to homosexual aesthetic values, revisited in a contemporary form by Mauricio Dias and Walter Riedweg. The feminist thread is carried on today by artists such as Romy Alizée, Dorothée Baumann, Anne Collier, Déborah de Robertis, Nadia Granados, Angela Marzullo, Lina Scheynius or again A.L. Steiner, while Eden Levi Am, Nicole Tran Ba Vang and Yuri Nagashima deal with instances of Lesbian and/or queer love.
While it goes without saying that Eros also impacts on political problems, it has to be recognized that in our mercantile societies it is blighted by very considerable economic interests, as is demonstrated by the works of Caroline Bernard, Fred Lonidier, Susana Meiselas, Charles Weber, or indeed Patrick Weidmann.
Nonetheless, everyone — we hope — has been able to experience, in the ecstasy of sexual union, a sense of the infinite reminiscent of cosmic infinity. Cosmic fuck by Lee Lozano, the only drawing among the works on show, is the abstract expression of this. All evocations of the cosmos will be mainly artists’ representations of it. In parallel with the cosmos which is beyond the reach of human beings, for instance black holes that are 53 million light years away, OSMOSCOSMOS will consider political issues in the relationship that we earth-dwellers have with the cosmos in our immediate vicinity.
To draw together the parts of a greater whole that can never be exhaustive, the exhibition will be submerged in semi-darkness, lit solely by the rays emanating from the projection of images or by the illumination of showcases that will contain prints of all kinds. The exhibition, bringing together a large number of artists the CPG has already introduced, aims to be a constellation among other constellations, an atlas of images in which visitors are invited to constitute, or extend, their own cosmos.
* See L’univers, les dieux, les hommes by Jean- Pierre Vernant ** From Les Bûchers de Bénarès by Michel Onfray