5 Reasons to Take Part in Wrocław Off Gallery Weekend
Wrocław Off Gallery Weekend is a unique event that is organized in Wrocław, Poland on the October 18–20, 2024. It networks and unites various...
Guest Profile 16 October 2024
This spring, the Stedelijk Museum, one of Amsterdam’s leading art institutions, opened the most extensive retrospective of Marina Ambarović ever in the Netherlands. The solo exhibition, which encompasses the celebrated artist’s entire career, will run from March 16th to July 14th, 2024. This show is distinct because Abramović has a special relationship with the city of Amsterdam, where she lived and worked in the 1970s.
The legendary Serbian performance artist Marina Abramović needs no introduction. Born in 1946 in Belgrade (former Yugoslavia, now Serbia), Abramović has always linked her works to her heritage, which she refers to as not “Serbian” but “ex-Yugoslavian.” However, Amsterdam has also played an important role in Abramović’s life and work.
In the mid-1970s, Abramović moved to Amsterdam, which welcomed her with a much more relaxed and progressive approach to the arts (especially in the sphere of nudity, as she remarked during the press conference preceding the opening of the show). At the same time, she met Ulay (Frank Uwe Laysiepen, 1943–2020), a German artist with whom she partnered both in life and in their collaborative work, pushing the boundaries of performance art to its limits.
The retrospective at Stedelijk Museum covers over 60 works, including archival footage of performances, photos, videos, and sculptures encompassing five decades of Abramović’s prolific career. The museum has dedicated an enormous space to celebrate the artist’s groundbreaking and controversial oeuvre and preserve her legacy for future generations. The problems she faced and tackled are ever-present:
When I was appointed Director, there was no doubt that the Stedelijk should present a survey of Marina Abramović’s oeuvre. She is a pivotal figure in the development of performance art, which found an early home at the Stedelijk, and has numerous connections with Amsterdam. After staging the major retrospective of Ulay’s work in 2020, we proudly opened the museum’s doors to Marina Abramović, who has a long and meaningful relationship with the Stedelijk. Re-enactments of historical performances keep her oeuvre alive – not just for us, but for future generations.
Museum’s press release.
This historic retrospective is not only limited to an assemblage of video footage, photographic documentation, and props used in Abramović’s legendary works but also features live performances re-enacted by artists trained at the Marina Abramović Institute. The works performed at Stedelijk are Art Must Be Beautiful, Artist Must Be Beautiful (1975), Imponderabilia (with Ulay) (1977), Luminosity (1997), and The House with the Ocean View (2002).
Additionally, visitors are invited to participate in two performances: Work Relation (with Ulay) (1978) and Counting the Rice from the Abramović Method.
While in Amsterdam, visit this must-see show at the Stedelijk Museum, which runs until July 14, 2024.
DailyArt Magazine needs your support. Every contribution, however big or small, is very valuable for our future. Thanks to it, we will be able to sustain and grow the Magazine. Thank you for your help!