Kunsthal Charlottenborg

Full of Days

30 Sep 2023 - 14 Jan 2024

Maryam Jafri, Untitled (Obstruction), 2023. Jason Dodge, 2023. Isabel Lewis in romance with Dirk Bell, In Repair, 2023. Henrik Plenge Jakobsen, Efterbilleder (Afterimages), 2023. Gunnar Aagaard Andersen, Tegn, 1971. Installation view, Full of Days, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, 2023. Photo by David Stjernholm.
Finn Reinbothe, In and Out of History (Anniversary Song), 2023. Olivia Holm-Møller, Farve og rytme, 1945. Installation view, Full of Days, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, 2023. Photo by David Stjernholm.
Installation view, Full of Days, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, 2023. Nina Beier, Closing Arguments, 2011. Jason Dodge, 2023. Isabel Lewis in romance with Dirk Bell, In Repair, 2023. Photo by David Stjernholm.
Jason Dodge, 2023. Anne Marie Carl-Nielsen, Tyrehoved, bemalet, 1905. Installation view, Full of Days, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, 2023. Photo by David Stjernholm.
Installation view, Full of Days, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, 2023. Maryam Jafri, Untitled (Obstruction), 2023. Jason Dodge, 2023. Isabel Lewis in romance with Dirk Bell, In Repair, 2023. Henrik Plenge Jakobsen, Efterbilleder (Afterimages), 2023. Gunnar Aagaard Andersen, Tegn, 1971. Palle Nielsen, Den fortryllende by Opus 23, 33 og 38, 1962. Photo by David Stjernholm.
Åbäke, Banner, 2023. Detail, Full of Days, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, 2023. Photo by David Stjernholm.
Installation view, Full of Days, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, 2023. Henrik Plenge Jakobsen, Efterbilleder (Afterimages), 2023. Anne Marie Carl-Nielsen, Typhon, 1905. Gunnar Aagaard Andersen, Tegn, 1971. Photo by David Stjernholm.
Installation view, Full of Days, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, 2023. Isabel Lewis in romance with Dirk Bell, In Repair, 2023. Henrik Plenge Jakobsen, Efterbilleder (Afterimages), 2023. Gunnar Aagaard Andersen, Tegn, 1971. Photo by David Stjernholm.
Installation view, Full of Days, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, 2023. Ursula Reuter-Christiansen, 3 kvinder i en båd, 1975. Emilie Mundt, Mandlig model, 1882. Photo by David Stjernholm.
Installation view, Full of Days, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, 2023. Marie Luplau, Sen høstsol, 1907. Marie Luplau, Oktobermorgen, 1901. Marie Luplau, Aftenstemning med kvinde på vej, 1886. Marie Luplau, Vinterlandskab, årstal ukendt. Marie Luplau, Udsigt over snedækkede hustage, 1892. Marie Luplau, Fred, 1915. Marie Luplau, Forårsmorgen på Gl. Kongevej, ukendt årstal. Benedikte Bjerre, Yesterday Once More, 2023. Yvette Brackman, General Assembly with Medium, 2023. Photo by David Stjernholm.
This year, 140 years have gone by since Kunsthal Charlottenborg – or Charlottenborg Exhibition Building as its was called in 1883 – was completed. Ever since its inception, the venue has hosted exhibitions featuring many of the leading contemporary artists of the given times, accommodating many different types of shows and activities.

The first art school for women was housed in the exhibition building in the early 1900s. For many decades, artists’ associations such as Grønningen and Corner showed their work in the exhibition building parallel with exhibitions featuring artists as diverse as P.S. Krøyer, Auguste Rodin, Anne Marie Carl-Nielsen and Joseph Beuys. Ever since the beginning, the juried Spring and Autumn exhibitions have been regular recurring features, establishing a rhythm on the Copenhagen art scene while presenting an array of new, unknown as well as established artists, architects and designers. National exhibitions from several European countries have also been staged here, and the darker aspects of history include a German propagandist book exhibition during Denmark’s occupation. Anthropological exhibitions such as the legendary and controversial Family of Man also took place at Charlottenborg in the 1950s. The rebellion of the hippie era was marked by major manifestations such as Festival 200 in 1969, the Women’s Exhibition XX in 1975 and the ‘Rainbow exhibition’ Love or Chaos in 1977.

Charlottenborg now celebrates its long history with a large-scale exhibition featuring all-new and older works alike. Together, they will evoke and add nuance to the history of Kunsthal Charlottenborg, a venue without a collection or a historical archive. Embracing chaos, affinities and time glitches, the exhibition Full of Days forges intuitive connections between historical moments and less-remembered shows, stories and events. Through a cacophony of voices, contemporary and historical artists are framed into a reflection on the elusiveness of time and the multiplicity of its representations, offering a non-linear account of one the Kunsthal’s possible histories.

Participating artists: Louise Alenius, Benedikte Bjerre, Valentina Desideri & Denise Ferreira da Silva, Jason Dodge, Emil Elg, Maryam Jafri, Henrik Plenge Jakobsen, Sahar Jamili, Eva la Cour, Isabel Lewis in romance with Dirk Bell, Asta Lynge, Simon Dybbroe Møller, Finn Reinbothe, Åbäke, in company with Gunnar Aagaard Andersen, Pia Arke, Nina Beier, Yvette Brackman, Anne Marie Carl-Nielsen, Claus Carstensen, Ursula Reuter Christiansen, Inge Ellegaard, Olivia Holm-Møller, Asger Jorn, On Kawara, Per Kirkeby, Arthur Köpcke, Marie Luplau, Susanne Mertz, Lee Miller, Ursula Munch-Petersen, Emilie Mundt, Palle Nielsen, Astrid Noack, Lene Adler Petersen, Franka Rasmussen, Nina Sten-Knudsen, Susanne Ussing, and more.

The exhibition is curated by Julia Rodrigues and Francesca Astesani from South into North.
 

Tags: Pia Arke, Nina Beier, Dirk Bell, Joseph Beuys, Benedikte Bjerre, Johannes Büttner, Claus Carstensen, Jason Dodge, Isabelle Graw, Maryam Jafri, Henrik Plenge Jakobsen, Asger Jorn, On Kawara, Per Kirkeby, Arthur Köpcke, Isabel Lewis, Lee Miller, Simon Dybbroe Møller, Palle Nielsen, Auguste Rodin, Denise Ferreira da Silva, Raphaela Simon