ART CITIES:Antwerp-The Welfare State
The welfare state operates with regulations, rights and obligations that apply to everyone in the same way, requiring individuals to identify themselves as members of society first and foremost. In this sense, the welfare state is the antithesis of art. Many artists support the welfare state in both theory and practice, and they are fascinated by rules as such, but they have little interest in following rules formulated by others than themselves…
By Dimitris Lempesis
Photo: M HKA Archive
The welfare state is an emancipatory political project, although it was first invented as a way of keeping class struggle and revolution at bay. It is hard to disassociate the European welfare state from the darker elements of recent history, such as militarism, colonialism and the degradation of the natural environment. Yet the welfare state, as a model for social cohesion and political stability, is now gaining ground in new parts of the world, notably in East Asia. The exhibition, does not look back with nostalgia at the welfare state in its ‘classical’ form as a utopian blueprint for an egalitarian (and homogenous) society in postwar Western Europe. It does not invite artists to ‘illustrate’ political and social engagement. But it does ask some fundamental questions. What is the ‘imaginary’ of the welfare state? Does it have a ‘form’? Can it be ‘shown’? The exhibition is both explicitly and implicitly socio-political, and raises topics of relevance to the current situation in the world, such as: the communication between citizens of different socio-economic status, the social implications of artificial intelligence, the changing status of labour, the rise of the European far-right, the plight of refugees from the civil war in Syria or a possible shift to a non-monetary economy. The Welfare State contains new and existing works by eight artists of different generations: Francisco Camacho Herrera, Josef Dabernig, Kajsa Dahlberg, Róza El-Hassan, Donna Kukama, Artūras Raila, Anne-Mie Van Kerckhoven and Stephen Willats It also contains visual and textual material from the four cultural archives in Flanders: Amsab and the Liberal Archive in Ghent, KADOC in Leuven and ADVN in Antwerp.
Info: “The Welfare State”, M HKA Museum of Contemporary Art Antwerp, Leuvenstraat 32, Antwerp, Duration: 29/5-27/9/15, Days 7 Hours: Tue-Wed & Fri-Sun: 11:00-18:00, Thu: 11:00-20:00, www.muhka.be