The Everlasting Dance Between Magnificence and Decay


LONDON — The Decay of Magnificence. The Fantastic thing about Decay, a compact however bold exhibition at Colnaghi Gallery, examines the idea of magnificence and its inevitable decay throughout pan-historical, pan-geographical, and pan-religious examples. The present spans historic Rome and Egypt, Tibetan Buddhism, and Christian-inflected vanitas, by means of to modern artwork. Such huge scope in a business gallery could possibly be simply learn as a calculated scheme to promote disparate or uncommon artworks. But impartial curator Alfred Kren initially supposed the idea for a museum. To find a house in Colnaghi, Kren has garnered vital privately owned works for the mission, not least a powerful Tenth-century Indian three-headed bust of Chamunda from the gathering of Anish Kapoor. 

Any try and establish deliberate iconographic or stylistic similarities between works of such disparate occasions, places, and creeds is a pointless train of discovering flukes. As a substitute, pleasure could also be discovered within the contrasts and juxtapositions inside single vistas, complimented by the intimate Colnaghi viewing area and the exhibition’s overarching sensibilities: temporality, even ghoulishness within the notion of decay. A curious inclusion is Swiss painter Ferdinand Hodler’s “Portrait of Clara Pasche-Battié” (1914), maybe the one piece within the present solely involved with capturing aesthetic magnificence. Surrounded by artwork that dwells on decay and mortality, it takes on a forlorn tone.

In a single grouping is Frans Francken the Youthful’s portray on copper, “Demise and the Miser” (undated). The cautionary work reveals a looming, loin-clothed skeleton taking part in a fiddle to a shocked aged man with materials wealth. Subsequent to it’s a unprecedented Nineteenth-century Mongolian Citipati whereby two skeletons representing wrathful deities signify the everlasting dance of dying, and a painted Sixteenth-century Kapala from Tibet, a ritualistic cranium cap apparently constructed from an precise human skull. Every differs in goal and execution, exemplifying the numerous attitudes towards dying of their respective cultures, and but every invokes a kindred feeling of unease, and even concern. Equally, a scholar’s rock from China (seventeenth–early 18th century) is positioned alongside Catherine Murphy’s “Swept Up” (1999), a minutely detailed pencil drawing of ground detritus swept into an unceremonious pile. Their shared grayscale textures and jagged factors and irregularities shaped by the chaos of nature reveal a curious visible commonality between wildly dissimilar items, highlighted by curatorial placement.    

The theme of magnificence and its decay is most concentrated in a small backroom containing Catherine Murphy’s outsized, confrontational close-up portray “Harry’s Nipple” (2003), paired with a Roman statue of Asclepius — a typical instance of the idealized physique — together with a tiny examine of a feminine nude by Fantin Latour (undated), and a zingingly pink, extremely abstracted determine by Maria Lassnig titled “Blasser Nachtgeist” (Pale in Spirit, c. 1990–99). By bringing collectively such numerous and excessive remedies of bodily illustration, the present means that our makes an attempt by means of historical past to establish and seize idealism within the human type have lengthy been unsettled and troubled. 

It’s maybe lucky that Kren’s thought landed in Colnaghi’s gallery areas relatively than an establishment, for this quietly however profoundly affecting assortment of works might have misplaced their energy when expanded in quantity. Such bold scope works right here exactly due to its focus. For as soon as, a conceptual gallery present units gross sales apart and stays refreshingly targeted on the idea. 

The Decay of Magnificence. The Fantastic thing about Decay. continues at Colnaghi Gallery (26 Bury Avenue, London, England) by means of November 8. The exhibition was curated by Alfred Kren.

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