Untitled-Human-Mask-Film-color-sound-Pierre-Huyghe-2014

Exhibition: ‘Animalesque’, Art across Species & Beings

Text by CLOT Magazine

Untitled-Human-Mask-Film-color-sound-Pierre-Huyghe-2014
Untitled (Human Mask), Pierre Huyghe (2014). Film still



In today’s world of increasing awareness of environmental issues, we must rethink our relationship with nature and its inhabitants. That is what Animalesque/Art across Species and Beings, taking place in Bildmuseet, Sweden, from June 14 to October 10, 2019, prompts its visitors to ponder.


The suffix “esque” refers to a mode of resemblance, of a way of being in the style of something. To be Animalesque is to resemble an animal, to be animal-like, to be able to become another animal potentially. Curator Filipa Ramos says when talking about the intellectual process behind the exhibition. Animalesque proposes practical, poetic, politic and sensorial experiences of becoming other by considering the transformations that such a process may generate in our bodies, minds, and in our cognitive, emotional and perceptive systems. She continues.


Bringing together an extensive array of works of 17 international artists (Pierre Huyghe, Carsten Höller, Pia Arke, Marcus Coates or Luca Frei) across a variety of media, the exhibition examines the human’s place on the planet, its connection to the changing environment and other species, and the problems we all face in this critical time of environmental crisis. Animalesque, which essentially means resembling an animal, depicts human-animal relationships aiming to blur the line between species, thus creating a more harmonious path to coexistence. It invites viewers to imagine transcending to another species and contemplate how that change affects them mentally, emotionally and sensorially, to create a more conscious and compassionate attitude towards other creatures.


The exhibition appeals to the visitor’s visual and auditory perception with sounds of nature and immersive compositions that unfold through time and space, producing a unique and captivating atmosphere. The exhibit’s animals are not traditionally portrayed, prized and capitalized for their skin and fur.


The show has no distinct start or finish, no single entrance or exit, and neither a regular display structure. It unravels naturally and defies the traditional idea of show space while bringing about a feeling of otherness through the interplay of light, shadows, sounds, and motion. Animalesque encourages us to appreciate otherness within us and compels us to realize that for change to happen, it needs to start with oneself.


Transversing many different disciplines such as philosophy, morality, environmentalism, and critical theory, the exhibition urges humanity open up to nature and other living things, be mindful of its effect on them, and wholeheartedly commit to change.







Website http://www.bildmuseet.umu.se/en/
(Media courtesy of Bildmuseet)
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