Thomas HirschhornThe Purple Line
galleria 3
curated by Hou Hanru, Luigia Lonardelli
valid until 9 April due to the Museum’s first-floor closing
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the only open ticket, valid for 100 years, for one admission to the Museum and all current exhibitions
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valid for access to the Museum during the last opening hour, available online and at the Museum’s digital ticket point only
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MAXXI’s Collection of Art and Architecture represents the founding element of the museum and defines its identity. Since October 2015, it has been on display with different arrangements of works.
galleria 3
curated by Hou Hanru, Luigia Lonardelli
“The world needs to be de-pixelated”, Thomas Hirschhorn.
This is one of Thomas Hirschhorn’s phrases to describe the Pixel-Collage, an impressive cycle of works created between 2015 and 2017. For the first time, they are grouped, following a layout designed by the artist, on a very long purple wall – The Purple Line – that runs through gallery 3. A project that seeks to show the invisible renegotiates the exhibition context and stimulates the viewer to remain vigilant and aware.
This research’s power lies in making us reflect on the control of images, on their authentication as “facts”, on the possibility of making visible the portions of reality that are subtracted from our gaze through pixelation, a technique in which the image becomes unrecognisable. These works, created by recombining advertising photos alongside pictures of mutilated bodies, often create embarrassment in the viewer, making us reflect on a concept the artist has often expressed: the spread of hypersensitivity in the contemporary world.
Hirschhorn is looking for a state of sensitivity, given by a gaze that remains vigilant and aware of what is around it, without denying it; hypersensitivity, on the other hand, often leads to censorship is paradoxically linked to self-protection and exclusion of the other.
Cataloghi della mostra
2021 exhibition’s catalogue
Thomas Hirschhorn. The Purple Line