This exhibition and the accompanying catalogue are the fruit of an idea sparked back in 2008, during a lunch attended by Miquel Barceló, his friends Monique and Jean Paul Barbier-Mueller along with the museum’s then director, Laurence Mattet.
The theme that connects them – scarifications – is a compelling one, no doubt because of the indelible mark that it conveys. This is what guided Miquel Barceló’s selection of his own pieces and the Musée Barbier-Mueller’s choices from its collections. The artist works his pieces like flesh that he scratches, deforms, tears, pricks and discolours. The “skins” of a Senufo anthropomorphic statuette, a Baule mask, a face-pendant from the kingdom of Benin, among others, have undergone similar procedures. But the designs that run through them attest to an act willed by tradition, a passage, a transformation.
Such mark-making and transformative actions are all expressions of an artistic or ritual practice. Creative gestures, signs of ownership, traces that have prophylactic, therapeutic, aesthetic or even erotic properties: the convergence of a myriad of visual experiences.
With the support of :
Kulap
ancestral figure. Southern New Ireland, Papua New Guinea. Limestone. H. 29.3 cm.
Collected around 1890. Former Josef Mueller collection (before 1939). Inv. 4317 C. Musée Barbier-Mueller. Photo Studio Ferrazzini Bouchet.
Bembe ritual spoon from Republic of the Congo. 19
th 20 th century. Hardwood. H. 17.2 cm.
Former Josef Mueller c ollection, acquired before 1939. Inv. 1021 8. Musée Barbier Mueller.
Photo Studio Ferrazzini Bouchet.
We use cookies to ensure the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site, we will assume that you are satisfied.OkPrivacy policy