Visceral Bodies
February 6, 2010 - May 16, 2010
Wangechi Mutu
I belong to you, you belong to me, 2007
ink, paint, mixed media, plant material
and plastic pearls on Mylar
Collection Victoria and Warren Miro, London
Copyright the Artist
Visceral Bodies presents the work of contemporary artists who investigate the human form, tracing artistic responses to scientific and medical innovations over the past two decades. Presented in conjunction with Leonardo da Vinci: The Mechanics of Man, the two exhibitions trace the considerable history of artists using the body as a subject of physiological and anatomical study. The contemporary artists included in Visceral Bodies underscore how cultural perceptions of the human body have shifted from an anatomical fact to a perpetually evolving and increasingly artificial or fragmented form.
The exhibition begins with representative works by artists such as Shelagh Keeley and Kiki Smith who approach the body as a symbolic object and create evocative and tactile representations of the human form. These artists are concerned with creating encounters that encourage the viewer to negotiate the political, emotional and gendered meanings of the human body. The exhibition continues with works that draw on advances in medical technologies and the biological sciences to construct new ways of representing the body. Artists such as Gabriel de la Mora, Wim Delvoye, Valie Export and Mona Hatoum borrow the tools of medical imaging to exteriorize what is internal. The exhibition also presents work by artists who imagine a fantastical future where the body has become fragmented and mutated.
Many of the works in Visceral Bodies comment on issues of identity, pathology and normality. Refuting the modernist image of science as an unquestioned source of progress, Visceral Bodies presents a variety of reflections on how the human form can be understood and represented, especially given the ambiguities and provocations of the genetic age.
Visceral Bodies is organized by the Vancouver Art Gallery and presented with the Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad. Curated by Daina Augaitis, chief curator, associate director.
Wim Delvoye
Erato (detail), 2001–02
steel, X-Rays, lead, glass
Courtesy studio Wim Delvoye, Belgium
Publication
Cultural perception of the human body has shifted from anatomical fact to a perpetually evolving and increasingly artificial or fragmented form. Visceral Bodies presents the work of contemporary artists who investigate the human form, tracing artistic responses to scientific and medical innovations over the past two decades. This book features nearly 30 colour reproductions of works by Berlinde De Bruyckere, Helen Chadwick, Kate Craig, Wim Delvoye, Valie Export, Betty Goodwin, Antony Gormley, Mona Hatoum, Sheilagh Keeley, Teresa Margolles, Gabriel de la Mora, Hiroko Okada, Marc Quinn, Thomas Schiitte, Kiki Smith, Magnus Wallin, Luanne Martineau, David Alt Mejd, Wangechi Mutu and Sue Williams.
Visceral Bodies was published on the occasion of an exhibition organized by the Vancouver Art Gallery, curated by Daina Augaitis and presented from February 6 to May 16, 2010.
Edited by Daina Augaitis
Essays by Daina Augaitis and Stephanie Rebick
44 pages
7 x 9.75 inches
28 colour illustrations
ISBN 9781895442823
Softcover
Vancouver Art Gallery
2010