The Borneo Post

New York expo on conspiracy theories

Art show at Met Breuer dedicated to modern and contempora­ry works aims to capture zeitgeist

- By Thomas Urbain

NEW YORK: The Kennedy assassinat­ion, Watergate, 911 and the war in Iraq: all these landmark events in US history fueled public suspicions about the elites and fostered conspiracy theories that inspired artists, and are the focus of a new exhibition at New York’s Met Breuer museum.

“Everything Is Connected: Art and Conspiracy,” which opened on Tuesday and runs until January 6, attempts to capture the zeitgeist of an age riven with alternativ­e theories about the hidden machinatio­ns of power, in what museum director Max Hollein calls a “timely exhibition.”

The history of conspiracy theories goes back centuries, but the show at the Met Breuer — an offshoot of the Metropolit­an Museum of Art dedicated to modern and contempora­ry works -- kicks off with the most famous of the modern era, the assassinat­ion of president John F Kennedy.

It is not so much the event itself but the investigat­ions that followed, notably the Warren and Church commission­s that examined the actions of the US spy agencies, which drive the show.

“It was really spurred on in a way by all of the commission­s that were taking place in the 1970s reexaminin­g what happened,” said curator Ian Alteveer.

“It begins to simmer and it comes to a slow boil by the 1970s.”

An example of how that has translated into the artistic psyche is the 1976 work “The Lee Harvey Oswald Interview,” featured on the poster for the exhibition.

The work by veteran US artist Lutz Bacher — who uses a pseudonym and has never revealed her real identity — features an imagined interview the artist herself carries out with the president’s assassin, together with a montage of pictures of Oswald.

Not enough distance from Trump

The story of Lee Harvey Oswald looms large over the exhibition, which opens with a huge portrait of the assassin entitled “Peach Oswald” by painter Wayne Gonzales.

The first part of the show is dedicated to works that are based on factual research and try to alert the viewer to the real cloak- and- dagger operations of the US government, businesses and arms dealers.

That includes Trevor Paglen’s series of photograph­s of secret CIA prisons and Alfredo Jaar’s work recalling former secretary of state Henry Kissinger’s support for Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet.

The second part of the show is devoted to artists inspired by conspiracy theories to create abstract, often fantastica­l art that sheds a light on the way society is affected by such tales.

“These works... all address an urgency to question, to imagine and to understand that the world that surrounds us and that we live in is way more complex than we think or that others want us to think,” said Hollein.

The exhibition does not include any works about President Donald Trump, a longstandi­ng backer of conspiracy theories such as his predecesso­r Barack Obama’s allegedly falsified birth certificat­e, or his favourite topic of “fake news.”

“There’s not yet enough historical distance, even for an artist, to kind of respond,” said Alteveer. — AFP

These works... all address an urgency to question, to imagine and to understand that the world that surrounds us and that we live in is way more complex than we think or that others want us to think. Max Hollein, Met Breuer museum director

 ??  ?? A patron looks at Silence=Death Project(1987- offset lithograph) during an exhibition at the Met Breuer, Metropolit­an Museum of Art. (Right) A woman takes a photo of Untitled (Vince Foster 1994) by Cady Noland. (Bottom right) A patron stands next to Peach Oswald (2001) by Wayne Gonzales. — AFP photos
A patron looks at Silence=Death Project(1987- offset lithograph) during an exhibition at the Met Breuer, Metropolit­an Museum of Art. (Right) A woman takes a photo of Untitled (Vince Foster 1994) by Cady Noland. (Bottom right) A patron stands next to Peach Oswald (2001) by Wayne Gonzales. — AFP photos
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