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  • Photo: Malle Madsen
    Photo: Malle Madsen
    Photo: Malle Madsen
    Photo: Malle Madsen
    Photo: Malle Madsen
    Photo: Malle Madsen
    Photo: Malle Madsen
    Photo: Malle Madsen
    Photo: Malle Madsen

    Artificial Optimism

    24.08.24 — 27.10.24

    Thjerza Balaj, Umberto Boccioni, Marc Camille Chaimowicz, Jessica Ekomane, Jana Euler, FOS, Sidsel Meineche Hansen, Frieda Toranzo Jaeger, Miriam Kongstad, Ville Laurinkosko, Camilla Lind, Asta Lynge, Diego Marcon, Simon Dybbroe Møller, Sandra Mujinga, Pamela Rosenkranz, Eve Stainton, Leonie Strecker, Alexander Tillegren

    The exhibition Artificial Optimism revisits Italian Futurism and examines Futurist ideas, exploring their relevance today. In 1912, the Futurist group exhibited at Den Frie Udstillingsbygning, thereby introducing this new, anarchist movement to Danish audiences. In the decade that followed, Futurism rapidly expanded its reach from the realms of literature, painting and sculpture to also include theatre, photography, music, architecture, scenography, design and politics. The intention was to reinvent not only the various media of art but all aspects of life, echoing and actively interacting with the dizzying transformations and new technologies of the modern age.

    The exhibition explores the intense experience of standing on the edge of a potential change that may transform everything. The exhibition title quotes F.T. Marinetti, aptly reflecting the Futurists’ ambivalent vision of the future. Artificial Optimism is part of an ongoing exhibition series, in which we revisit past moments in the exhibition history of Den Frie and reflect on art avant-gardes of the past and their relevance today. The endeavour takes a non-linear approach to the past examining how artistic practices undertaken at different times can be motivated by the same impulses, albeit from very different starting points and with different consequences. In this exhibition, we use Futurism as a prism for looking at contemporary art with fresh eyes – and concurrently with this, use contemporary works to think about what ‘futurism’ means today.

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    Photo: Malle Madsen
    Photo: Malle Madsen
    Photo: Malle Madsen
    Photo: Malle Madsen
    Photo: Malle Madsen
    Photo: Malle Madsen

    The exhibition is generously supported by

    The Augustinus Foundation

    Beckett-Fonden

    Danish Arts Foundation

    Dansk Tennis Fond, Kvadrat

    Det Obelske Familiefond

    New Carlsberg Foundation

    Aage og Johanne Louis-Hansens Fond

    15. Juni Fonden.

    Curator

    Magnus Thorø Clausen

     

    Curator assistent

    Josefine Gynther Craig

     

    Chief technician

    Søren Fjeldsø

     

    Graphic design

    Wilfred Wagner