A Peculiar Paradox

3 September 2020
-
18 October 2020

Kersgallery

Where

3 September 2020
-
18 October 2020

When

About the exhibition

All information

A Peculiar Paradox

In 1938, French philosopher Georges Bataille gave two lectures in Paris titled “Attraction and Repulsion”, in which he raised the question why people are drawn to things that they otherwise regard as horrific?  Bataille associated this peculiar paradox with curiosity and suppression, or, that we are curious of horror at the same time we suppress the desire of it. 

In contemporary culture, the attraction repulsion paradox is evident in widespread consumption of violent movies, where we basically watch deaths, mutilations and all sorts of violent acts as a form of entertainment. 

American philosopher, Noel Carroll, who later deepened Batailles speculations in his book The Philosophy of Horror: Or, Paradoxes of the Heart, argues that we are drawn to this form of entertainment because we enjoy feeling fear or disgust without really being threatened by it. The key in the attraction repulsion paradox is therefore fictional, or knowing that the threat is not real but feeling it anyway, thus creating inconsistency between our thoughts and feelings.

A very important factor in the attraction repulsion paradox is the language of aesthetics. We may be horrified when we see a murder committed on screen, but also captured and fascinated by the aesthetic language of the filmmaker. A great example of this is the famous shower scene in Alfred Hitchcock´s, Psycho. When Marion, a guest at Bates Motel, is taking a shower and Norman, the insane motel owner dressed up in his dead mother´s outfit, attacks her and repeatedly stabs her naked flesh with a kitchen knife. Gasping for her last breath Marion grabs the shower curtain and tears it down as she falls to the floor. The camera then focuses on the blood being washed down the sewer and zooms into the dark void of the drain. It is an absolutely perfect scene where one is caught up in a conflict of being repulsed by a brutal act but attracted by formalistic beauty.

The attraction repulsion paradox plays a big role in the history of art, spanning from artists like Caravaggio and Francisco Goya to the likes of Edvard Munch and Francis Bacon.

It is in this peculiar paradox, as well as joint fascination for Hitchcock´s craft, that Dutch artist Gé-Karel van der Sterren and Icelandic artist Jón B. K. Ransu meet within the walls of Kers Gallery. Van der Sterren is well known for conflicting imagery, such as sweet colourful skies in post-apocalyptic landscapes, hints of tranquility in disaster areas or plant eating insects crawling up the stem of a beautiful sprouted flower, while Ransu takes on the conflicting perceptions of absence and presence with obvious references to the history of art and filmmaking. 

The two artists studied together at AKI in the early nineties and shared a studio for a while where they influenced and encouraged each other with discussions and debates about painting and aesthetics. Oddly enough, after 30 years of friendship, the two have never exhibited together. Until now.

Artists

ARTIST

Gé-Karel van der Sterren