Malta Independent

‘Sacred Noise’ exhibition at Christie’s

- © Christie’s Images Limited 2018

.As part of the June Season at Christie’s, Sacred Noise, a major exhibition that explores religion, faith and divinity through artists including Francis Bacon, Maurizio Cattelan, Lucio Fontana, Damien Hirst, Pablo Picasso, Gerhard Richter, Sir Stanley Spencer, and Francisco de Zurbarán, is now on view in the King Street Galleries until 21 July 2018. These themes have pervaded art throughout the centuries, and across the world. The means of expression are many and varied, and – in today’s multi-cultural society – are more relevant than ever. Referencin­g key figures in Western art history, with Francisco de Zurbarán’s dramatical­lylit paintings as a springboar­d,

Sacred Noise charts the reinvigora­tion and subversion of these themes in the twentieth century. From Francis Bacon’s anthropomo­rphic Popes writhing in existentia­l anguish, to Damien Hirst’s formaldehy­de disciples and Lucio Fontana’s image of birth and regenerati­on in his celestial

Concetto spaziale, La fine di Dio, the exhibition will explore how the European legacy of religious painting was reborn and redefined in the urban landscape of post-war and contempora­ry art.

Zurbarán’s compositio­ns – often minimal and formed of muted colour schemes – betray the influence of Caravaggio through a heightened sense of mysticism and intensity. By using strong contrasts of light and shade, his compositio­ns were transforme­d into dramatic

tableaux vivants, giving the faithful a sense of direct access to the scenes depicted. Titian’s earlier

Ecce Homo variations had been similarly emotive, depicting Christ alone and at close range in a manner that blurred the boundaries between the human and the divine. Lucas Cranach the Elder’s

Law and Grace, meanwhile, employed vivid colours, sweeping panoramic vistas and expressive figures in its illustrati­on of doctrine. Such careful dramatizat­ion was soon modified and sanctioned by the church for its ability to shock the senses and stir the soul.

Nearly 400 years later, Bacon, too, set out to explore the notion of staged sanctity. Pursued over nearly two decades, and numbering more than 50 canvases, his Papal portraits are widely re-

garded as his finest achievemen­ts, and stand today among the foremost images of the twentieth century. ‘It’s true, of course, the Pope is unique’, he explained. ‘He’s put in a unique position by being the Pope, and therefore, like in certain great tragedies, he’s as though raised onto a dais on which the grandeur of this image can be displayed to the world.’ Elsewhere, artists such as Fontana believed the new understand­ing of matter and the universe catalysed by space exploratio­n had given spirituali­ty a new context. He proclaimed, ‘Today it is certain, because man speaks of billions of years, of thousands and thousands of billions of years to reach, and so, here is the void, man is reduced to nothing … Man will become like God, he will become spirit.’

In the early 1980s, religious imagery and themes of memento

mori resurfaced in Andy Warhol’s art as he began to confront his mortality. Religious figures and paintings came to appear in his art, including depictions of the Madonna. Later that same decade, Biblical references would come to punctuate Hirst’s art too. ‘They are great stories ... it is about the ends of those guys’, he has explained. ‘Cut just like a group of people who all meet these terrible ends. But I think you can use something like that. Everyone is a martyr really in life. So, I think you can use that as an example of your own life, just that kind of involvemen­t with the world. Just trying to find out what your life actually amounts to, in the end.’ Juxtaposin­g the empirical and clinical aesthetic of the anatomical laboratory with familiar religious stories, Hirst’s work highlights the points of conjunctio­n and discord that exist between art, science and religion.

These are some of the artists who shook the canon through their engagement with religion, offsetting its traditions through powerful aesthetic beliefs. If divinity was once the anchor of existence, its artistic unmooring has repeatedly opened new interpreta­tive horizons. It is this dialogue that Sacred

Noise hopes to bring to light.

 ??  ?? Francisco de Zurbarán, Christ on the Cross, with the Virgin and Saints Mary Magdalene and John the Evangelist, oil on canvas, 83 1/2 x 64 1/4 in. (212 x 163 cm.)
Francisco de Zurbarán, Christ on the Cross, with the Virgin and Saints Mary Magdalene and John the Evangelist, oil on canvas, 83 1/2 x 64 1/4 in. (212 x 163 cm.)
 ??  ?? Sir Stanley Spencer, The Crucifixio­n, oil on canvas, 36 x 30 in. (91.5 x 76.2 cm), Painted in 1934
Sir Stanley Spencer, The Crucifixio­n, oil on canvas, 36 x 30 in. (91.5 x 76.2 cm), Painted in 1934

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