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National Museum of Contemporary Art Bucharest announces Mircea Cantor: Q.E.D

National Museum of Contemporary Art, Bucharest presents Mircea Cantor: Q.E.D on view 10 April 2013–10 April 2014, the first solo exhibition in Romania of one of the most important young artists to emerge on the international art scene over the last decade. Q.E.D. is the largest survey of Mircea Cantor’s practice to date, comprising 30 titles: photographs, videos, drawings and sculptures, from his 1999 The Origin of the World (After Courbet), a work that motivated Cantor’s expatriation to France, to the recent Sic Transit Gloria Mundi (2012), and to Business Class Worried (2013), especially created for this exhibition.

Working with symbols in a symbolic building is the challenge on which this exhibition is triggered. Exhibition areas that retain elements of the original decoration, and testify of the traumatic past of the building where the Museum is located, will host large-scale, catalytic works by Cantor: a gigantic wall drawing in dynamite wire, whose ignition will be performed at the opening, or a life-size wooden sculpture representing a traditional house with a scaffold roof from the Maramures county in Northern Romania.

The latter work, Threshold Resigned, oscillates poetically between the local and the universal, in tandem with interventions such as the DNA Kiss, overlooked by the ceiling work Ciel variable. Cantor orchestrates a complex discussion of displacement, fragility, certainty and anxiety, critically echoing the history of the building—the House of People, for whose construction in the 1980s countless anonymous craftsmen, artisans and artists were employed to shape the monument of absolute Power.

Sic Transit Gloria Mundi folds into one a Vanitas-like image and a reflection on economic disparity. The film is installed in dialogue with Holy Flowers (black-and-white photographs of Israeli machine guns, kaleidoscopically mirrored), and Fishing Fly (an airplane fashioned from recycled oil barrels, fitted with a golden hook). Cantor’s acclaimed Deeparture and Wind Orchestra share the preoccupation with how violence can be metaphorically implied and politically instituted with the anxiety and sublimation of violence.

The installation of the exhibition is geared to provoke (self-)reflection. Quod Erat Demonstrandum: Cantor’s auto-ironic title counterbalances the artist’s ambition to create unique, universal pieces, to operate artistically within the domain of irrefutable statements. Works such as Unpredictable Future, All the Directions or Ciel variable reproduce this irresolution between a transitive approach and the uncertainties of interpretation that arise when artistic statements meet their viewers.

Mircea Cantor: Q.E.D. will be on display for one year. Special events and a rotating program of video works are scheduled for early September. The Guest Room, a space integrated in the exhibition, will host each month a work by an artist or an acquaintance Cantor shares affinities with: Rudolf Bone (April), Geta Brătescu (May), Gabriela Vanga (June), Ion Grigorescu (July), Corneliu Brudașcu and Andrei Șerban (August), Oanea Vasile and Ioan Opriș (September), Victor Man (October), Ciprian Mureșan (November), Adrian Gagiu (December), Victoria Berbecaru (January), Miklós Onucsán (February), Pavel & Tudor (March).

Mircea Cantor
Mircea Cantor was born in Romania in 1977. He lives and works “on earth.”

His major solo exhibitions include Mircea Cantor, Centre Pompidou (2012); Sic Transit Gloria Mundi, MACRO Museo di Arte Contemporanea, Roma, (2012). More Cheeks Than Slaps, Le Credac, France, (2011); Wise as a Serpent and Innocent as a Dove, Städtisches Museum Abteiberg, Monchengladbach, Germany, (2010). Mircea Cantor solo show, Kunsthaus Zürich, Zurich (2009), The need for uncertainty, Modern Art Oxford, Arnolfini, Bristol and Camden Arts Centre, London (2008-2009); Ciel Variable, Fonds Régional d´Art Contemporain Champagne Ardennes – FRAC, France (2007); The title is the last thing, Philadelphia Museum of Art, USA (2006). And group shows Our Magic Hour – Yokohama Triennale, Yokohama, Japan (2011); Airs de Paris, Centre Pompidou, Paris (2007); and the 4th Berlin Biennale (2006).

He won the Prix Marcel Duchamp Award, Paris in 2011 and Prix Fondation d’entreprise Ricard, Paris in 2004.

MNAC
Palace of the Parliament, wing E4
Izvor St. 2-4
050563 Bucharest, Romania
www.mnac.ro