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20 May 2014

Showroom MAMA presents Social Image - Opening Friday 20 June 2014


Social Image
Showroom MAMA
http://www.showroommama.nl

Info

Date of opening:
20 June 2014, 17:00-21:00
Exhibition date:
21 June till 24 August
Opening hours:
Wednesday through Sunday
from 13:00 until 18:00

Contact

alyssa@showroommama.nl
Alyssa Mahler
+31 (0)102332022

Address

http://www.showroommama.nl
Showroom MAMA
Witte de Withstraat 29-31
3012 BL Rotterdam
The Netherlands

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Social Image
Opening: 20 June 2014, 17:00-21:00
Exhibition date: 21 June till 24 August
Artists: Benjamin Li (1985, NL), Eva Olthof (1983, NL), Helen Flanagan (1988, UK), Marijn de Jong (1989, NL), Puck Verkade (1987, NL) and Gino van Weenen (1986, NL)
Curated by: Gerben Willers

In recent months, MAMA has worked with a group of artists on the topic of social image. Following an open call in January 2014, MAMA found itself in the privileged position of finding six young artists who were connected by a strong affinity to the term. Over the past months, they have informed one another with relevant ideas about this concept.
Although social image may not yet be an institutional term, it touches on many of the current themes important to contemporary art such as social media, socially engaged performances and happenings, and internet-related art gerelateerde kunst.

Online marketer Tony Obregon talks about 'social image curating' as a way of people connecting by using pictures to identify with their needs and desires. If so, any image that is posted online is a social image: it need only be posted on a personal account. Thus a social image can be a picture of someone's new shoes or a reproduction of the Mona Lisa.

In Obregon's vision, social images are passive images. They are used to construct someone's online profile on social media. To make a social image, one need only to connect with different images, music, movies, etc. In his idea of 'social image curating', there is an overall similarity between images, whether (reproductions of) works of art or images of everyday consumer products. They are the building blocks of someone's social appearance.

Artist Rafaël Rozendaal also has an interest in social images. He believes there is potential for social images that transform over time, 'like a Wikipedia article', by allowing users to change them. A changing picture or text that takes on a life of its own, as determined by third parties, is reminiscent of the behaviour and meaning of memes, both on and offline. A social image understood as a meme behaves like a carrier of cultural ideas, symbols, and practices that are passed from one person to another through writing, speech, gestures, rituals, and other reproducible phenomena.

The aim of the Social Image project is to enrich the knowledge and understanding of the social image concept, and measure the practice of a group of talented artists from different practices: visual artists, a theatre maker, a photographer, and a poet. The Social Image group functions as a 'community of practice' – a group of people with a common interest who, in practice, learn from each other through discussions and working together. Within the 'community of practice' the informal exchange and the connectedness with a common goal form an important condition for the participant's development and results in new work.

In recent months, the artists, together with MAMA's staff and external guests, discussed the subject of social image and related this concept to their own professional practice. Through this process of sharing information and experiences, they have learned from each other, and created additional opportunities to develop professionally. MAMA facilitated interviews and studio visits with external partners – JODI (Joan Heemskerk and Dirk Paesmans), Bruno Listopad, Abner Preis, and Boris van Berkum – making new works possible and resulting in the exhibition Social Image. MAMA has adopted a similar role with previous solo and group exhibitions with young artists, but in the Social Image project it has been more formalized. The discussions and interviews were also important for MAMA because it is a form of engagement with artists in which we believe and want to further develop.

The Social Image publication accompanies the exhibition and includes interviews by Milou Terpstra with all members of the group. The Dutch publication (edition of 750, designed by OONA) is available to visitors of the exhibition for free.