BASEL, Switzerland, March 27, 2014 /PRNewswire/ --
Semiwild - or unlimited desire
An artistic reflection on the permanent exhibition "Expeditions"
28 March 2014 to 7 September 2014
Objects have the power to satisfy all kinds of desires. What differences can we find between consumer goods, luxury goods and artistic creations that have been produced under different economic conditions and with different intentions? How does their meaning change when they are taken out of their original context and used for purposes for which they were not designed? The artist Ania Soliman challenges museum conventions and explores the concepts of "possession" and "desire" in an unconventional way.
(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20140327/677687 )
In the special exhibition "Semiwild - or unlimited desire", the artist Ania Soliman delves into the meaning of artefacts. Her starting point is the permanent exhibition "Expeditions", which displays collections of objects acquired for scientific purposes from different eras. In six areas, the artist examines why, how and where which objects are present and what their presence says about the human desire for objects. What kinds of desires are embodied in objects? How do these types of desire in objects for a consumer market differ from those in objects in other economic systems? The different ways in which Ania Soliman arranges and confronts artefacts from the museum's collections with her own works of art creates an installation that on the one hand challenges museum conventions and at the same time explores the concepts of "possession" and "desire" in unexpected fashion. The juxtaposition and arrangement of objects from the museum with the artist's images and videos produces a general view of monetary systems and their effects on work, the flow of commodities and product creation - and our desire for objects. The artist takes visitors on an unexpected journey of exploration that will allow them to discover a great deal about possession and desire.
Picture is available via epa european pressphoto agency ( http://www.epa.eu/ ) and can be downloaded free of charge from: http://www.presseportal.ch/de/pm/100050324/keygroup=bild
A picture accompanying this release is available in the AP PhotoExpress feed using ref# PRN10.
For further information, please contact:
Pierre-Alain Jeker
Museum der Kulturen Basel
Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Münsterplatz 20
4001 Basel, Switzerland
T +41(0)61-266-56-34
pierre-alain.jeker@bs.ch
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