Press release
The Hague, 11 September 2008
Silvia B.
Les Beaux & Les plus Beaux
15 November 2008 to 11 January 2009
GEM Museum of Contemporary Art, The Hague
Silvia B. (b. Rotterdam, 1963) is known for her sculptures that are neither
entirely human nor entirely animal. Her installation specially created for
this exhibition at GEM again features human figures which are by no means
open to simple interpretation. It depicts a group of boys dressed in white
and wearing white masks playing with their white toys. It could be just an
innocent masquerade, but it might equally be a matter of life and death. The
men in Les Beaux, a series of drawings, are equally ambiguous. It is difficult
to decide whether they are displaying mere superficial vanity or an inner
need, reflecting the spirit of the age or timeless human traits.
Silvia B.’s work is full of hybrid characters, balancing between good
and evil, beauty and ugliness. They appear attractive at first, perfectly
made, drawing the viewer closer, only to arouse feelings of alarm as the unconventional
nature of their attractiveness becomes apparent. And the characters in her
installation Les plus Beaux are no exception.
Having arrived in the deepest darkest gallery at GEM, visitors discern six
white rostrums on which stand boys aged between four and ten clad in white.
They seem to be guarding a glass case in which lies another little boy dressed
in a white suit, almost entirely buried under a large white dog that is lying
on top of him, its ears pricked. This silent, fairytale scene, which includes
several white animals, is explosively charged thanks to the extravagant clothes
worn by the boys. Smart white suits combine with white sportswear and accessories
to give a look that is at odds with convention. Each character clearly has
his own style and status within the group. With their faces hidden behind
a variety of masks, their customised images define both their individual and
their shared territory, as they stand with their lovely white toys at the
ready.
Before visitors enter the room, they get a foretaste of the scene in the form
of a tiny man holding his own head in a stocking, a dreamlike expression on
his face. Where his head should be there is a skull with a brace on the upper
row of teeth. Behind him hangs a list of names – like film credits –
of the characters in the installation (including Mors, Lord Rangda, Hero and
Mr. Gaff).
References to both fairytales and martial arts, to street culture and fairground
life as well as to art history, the reversal of meaning and rebuffing of opinion
are typical of Silvia B.’s work. The discord between where we come from
and where we are going (our animal instincts and our artificial, rational
side) play a key role. The images she produces are caught between different
ages, sexes or cultures, and also between human and puppet, or human and animal.
The growing importance of fashion in Silvia B.’s work makes it highly
topical. For a long time now, fashion has been about more than simply clothes,
hair and make-up; the entire body is now a showcase for the extensions, prostheses,
mutilations and other adornments that reflect the spirit of the age.
These themes can also clearly be seen in the series of drawings entitled Les
Beaux (2005-2006), a collection of detailed portraits of men who have customised
themselves to such an extent with make-up, tattoos or surgery that they have
placed themselves outside the norm. Unlike the gang of extrovert young boys,
however, each of these men is engaged in his own silent battle.
Note to editors:
Further information from: Laura Stamps, Press Office, 070–3381121, lstamps@gemeentemuseum.nl
Press materials available at www.gemeentemuseum.nl,
under Press.