The Pleasure of Text
The Museum of Fine Arts Le Locle (MBAL), is thrilled to present the collective exhibition Le plaisir du texte (The pleasure of text), an exploration of the relationship between images and words in art. Taking its title from Roland Barthes鈥 1973 book of the same name, the show goes on an intimate and visceral journey of our engagement with the written word.
From the depiction of the pleasure of reading, through a dialogue between masterpieces from the MBAL collection and selected contemporary artists, the exhibition invites a gradual verbal invasion of the image. Slowly, the poem liberates itself and becomes an object in the visual and concrete poetry room; the algorithm becomes the author; urban spaces and advertising slogans turn into pop universes; punctuation marks emerge as sculptures; and the manuscript of Mary Shelley鈥檚 Frankenstein comes to life as a photograph. Each room of the museum is animated by textual, visual and typographical games 鈥 even the fa莽ade of the building is taken over. Children are welcome to play and think in a special space dedicated to them.
In mischievous rebellion against the continuous flow of images which currently inundates our lives, this show reaffirms the power of words and invites the public to explore their imaginative nature.
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The Museum of Fine Arts Le Locle (MBAL), is thrilled to present the collective exhibition Le plaisir du texte (The pleasure of text), an exploration of the relationship between images and words in art. Taking its title from Roland Barthes鈥 1973 book of the same name, the show goes on an intimate and visceral journey of our engagement with the written word.
From the depiction of the pleasure of reading, through a dialogue between masterpieces from the MBAL collection and selected contemporary artists, the exhibition invites a gradual verbal invasion of the image. Slowly, the poem liberates itself and becomes an object in the visual and concrete poetry room; the algorithm becomes the author; urban spaces and advertising slogans turn into pop universes; punctuation marks emerge as sculptures; and the manuscript of Mary Shelley鈥檚 Frankenstein comes to life as a photograph. Each room of the museum is animated by textual, visual and typographical games 鈥 even the fa莽ade of the building is taken over. Children are welcome to play and think in a special space dedicated to them.
In mischievous rebellion against the continuous flow of images which currently inundates our lives, this show reaffirms the power of words and invites the public to explore their imaginative nature.
Artists on show
- Andres Lutz & Anders Guggisberg
- Anne Turyn
- Carla Demierre
- Chloe Dewe Mathews
- Elizabeth Lebon
- Françoise Mairey
- Gisela Torres
- Jo Spence
- Ketty La Rocca
- Lenora de Barros
- Les Girardets
- Luca Massaro
- Melissa Catanese
- Mirella Bentivoglio
- Nelis Franken
- Nora Turato
- Olivier Lebrun
- Philippe Decrauzat
- Sara Knelman
- Suzanne Bernard
- Triin Tamm & Rollo Press
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