Michel Rein

Maja Bajevic

29 Nov 2014 - 17 Jan 2015

We are the last ones of yesterday, but the first ones of tomorrow, Michel Rein, Paris, 2014
MAJA BAJEVIC
We are the last ones of yesterday, but the first ones of tomorrow
29 November 2014 - 17 January 2015

On the occasion of Maja Bajevic’s third personal exhibition at the Michel Rein Gallery (“Quelqu’un veille sur toi”, 2008 and “Terrains Vagues”, 2005), a series of phrases suspended in blue neon dominate the Gallery’s space:

We Are Hungry in Three Languages
We’ll be on Top
We Are an Image of the Future
We Are the People
We’ll Take More Care of You
We Shall Overcome
We Want Bread, and Roses Too

Short, violent, incantatory, these phrases are part of a collection of slogans derived from the great social and political uprisings of 20th century, patiently archived by Maja Bajevic to be used as materiel for a series of museum exhibitions initiated in 2011: “To Be Continued” at Museo Reina Sofia, Palacio de Cristal (2011), the DAAD Gallery in Berlin (2012), “Take Liberty!” at the National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Oslo (2014).

A display case allows visitors to view 150 files, documenting this collection of slogans. Two voices, that of a man and that of a woman, recite the archived slogans in turn.

A “Steam Machine”, a -home made-construction, put together from a washing machine drum, where the laundry produces steam through which the texts and slogans are projected. In the mist, the slogans appear, become deformed, and then disappear, as if to show erratic changes in the historical moment in motion.

A series of drawings and collages from the project “How to Explain the World to the Martians” presented for the first time at the exhibition “The Unanswered Question. Iskele 2” at the Neuer Berliner Kunstverein (2013) explores the German capital’s past. Iconography of a vanished town, which lost its populations and its buildings to leave place for real estate projects at the service of a globalised gentrification.

The exhibition at the Gallery follows on from the work of Maja Bajevic, where personal experience, collective history, and great history merge. The question of identity is omnipresent, an identity which is constructed in a permanent coming and going, at times fluid and violent.

Maja Bajevic (Sarajevo 1967) Franco-Bosnian . A graduate of Fine Arts in Sarajevo and the Ecole Nationale Superieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris, she lives and works in Paris and Sarajevo. Maja Bajevic participated in major international exhibitions : Manifesta Ljubljana (2000), Istanbul Biennal (2001), Venice Biennal (2003), Documenta 12 (2007) and enjoyed solo exhibitions in museums : MACBA (2004), MoMA PS1 (2004), Moderna Museet Stockholm (2005) national Gallery, Sarajevo (2006), Masa Foundation Bevilacqua (Italy) (2008),or at the Museo Reina Sofia, Crystal Palace (2011), Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Oslo (2014).

In France, her work was regularly presented for personal or collective exhibitions : National Centre of Photography, Paris, Printemps de Septembre, Toulouse (2003), « La Force de l’Art », Grand Palais (2006), Carré d’Art, Nîmes (2008), FRAC Pays de la Loire (2009), CAPC, Bordeaux (2010), FRAC Franche Comté (2014), Centre Georges Pompidou, for the exhibitions « Air de Paris » (2007), « Elles » (2010).

« Women at Work : in construction » 1999 by Maja Bajevic is currently exhibited at the Centre Georges Pompidou in the new hanging of contemporary art collections « Une histoire, Art, Architecture, Design des années 1980 à nos jours »

Thanks: Cristina Agostinelli, Sophie Duplaix, Christine Macel, Emma Lavigne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris/ Andrea Kroksnes, National Museum of Art , Architecture and Design , Oslo/ Manuel Borja-Villel , Lynn Cooke, Teresa Velázquez, Centro de Arte Reina Sofia , Madrid
 

Tags: Maja Bajevic, Andrea Kroksnes, Andrea Kroksnes