Fondation Carmignac - The Infinite Woman - ORLAN
April 27, 2024Fondation Carmignac - The Infinite Woman - ORLAN
April 27, 2024
April 27, 2024 - November 3, 2024
The Fondation Carmignac presents 'The Infinite Woman’ exhibition - curated by Alona Pardo - at Villa Carmignac on the island of Porquerolles, in the South of France, from Saturday, April 27 2024.
‘Strong, lustful, temptresses, femme fatales, caregivers, demonic or mythic, women have been represented in a myriad of ways across the centuries to fulfil a patriarchal view of the world.
Weaving the narrative of artists who, regardless of gender, have been able to challenge not only social norms but also the limitations of art and its restrictive categories. Central to the artists and works represented is a commitment to experimentation and to pushing the boundaries of artistic practice.
Organised thematically, the exhibition draws on ideas of myths and monsters in the representation of women to reflect on womanhood in all its many guises. Moving surefootedly between images of goddesses to scrutinizing the idea of the femme fatale, from disruptive ideas of motherhood to paying homage to the power of women’s desire, from beguiling fairytale creatures to cyborgs highlighting their emancipatory potential, to elevating (dis) obedient bodies that upend Western conventions of beauty while reflecting on the body as vessel, the exhibition closes with a section devoted to sirens and anti-icons to explore how gender is shape shifting in the 21st century. Ultimately, the works in the exhibition disrupt conventional ideas of womanhood to reflect on feminine power and how the representation of women has shaped global cultural attitudes.
From Sandro Botticelli to Judy Chicago, including also works by Michael Armitage, John Currin, Loie Hollowell, Lisa Yuskavage, Lee Bul, Martine Gutierrez and Billie Zangewa, the exhibition combines major works from the Carmignac collection (Sandro Botticelli, Roy Lichtenstein) with exceptional loans (Louise Bourgeois / Musée d'Art Moderne de Paris, Mary Beth Edelson / TATE) and productions created specifically for the exhibition (France-Lise McGurn, Paloma Proudfoot).
Alona Pardo, curator of the exhibition