Martian Museum of Terrestrial Art••••

6. Mar - 18. May 08 / ended Barbican Art Gallery and The Curve

Tickets: £8/6 members

Exhibition | Multi-disciplinary | London


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Mission: to interpret and understand contemporary art

Anthropologists from outer space set out on a mission to understand life on earth. Imagine that they begin their mission by examining the curious phenomenon that human beings call 'contemporary art'. What does Art tell them about human life and culture?

Martian Museum of Terrestrial Art presents contemporary art works under the fictional guise of a museum collection conceived by and designed for extraterrestrials. Playful and irreverent, the museum's collection features some 150 works by over 100 artists, from modern masters to bright new stars including Joseph Beuys, Cai Guo-Qiang, Maurizio Cattelan, Jimmie Durham, Thomas Hirschhorn, Ryan Gander, Mona Hatoum, Susan Hiller, Damien Hirst, Brian Jungen, Dr. Lakra, Louise Lawler, Sherrie Levine, John McCracken, Bruce Nauman, Mike Nelson, Cornelia Parker, Sigmar Polke, Ugo Rondinone, Daniel Spoerri, Haim Steinbach, Francis Upritchard, Jeffrey Vallance, Andy Warhol and Rebecca Warren.

Believing these objects to have a real or functional use, the Museum's curators deploy an eccentric classification system. They treat artworks as artifacts. The Martian perspective opens up contemporary art to fresh interpretations as well as humorous misunderstandings. In presuming to understand an unfamiliar culture, the Martian Museum of Terrestrial Art parodies the way that Western anthropologists historically viewed non-Western cultures through alien eyes.
http://www.barbican.org.uk/artgallery/event-detail.asp?ID=7038


User opinions

1 Opinions where posted


1

steelpen 

Interesting categories

by steelpen 06.03.08 13:48
••••

The show is organised in categories such as Ritual, Communication, Magic and Belief, and Ancestor Worship which does make you think differently about things.

However it might have been good to take this idea further and really look at a more generic and not such art centered set of categories such as for example art as luxury object / social status. It would have allowed the viewer to step outside the art context instead staying well within the realm.

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