THOMAS RAAT
 
  
Thomas Raat's project 'MUMU: Malice and Misunderstanding' is an examination, calling into question two extremes situated on the borders of art criticism. The touring exhibition took place in London and Amsterdam during 2008 and 2009. The project included a specially editioned catalogue. 


 
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MUMU is an examination. Calling into question two extremes situated on the borders of art criticism. Two extremes that determine how an artist makes their work and how an audience perceives it. Both dependent on the other. In their juxtaposition an artwork can be created and it can be re-created. It can become outstandingly famous. And it can be destroyed.

Modernism was a reaction, a re-ordering, a rebellion against the past. Against tradition and history. It defined the need for clear, easily recognizable and memorable visual symbols. Out of it emerged the artist as a spiritual totem of creation; creating works of art that have become iconic in art history as unique and original displays of progress.

Neoism on the other hand is a subculture actively engaged in avoiding cultural categorization. It is a process of production that functions by means of shared pseudonyms & identities, a wide propagation of fakes, paradoxes and outright plagiarism. As a form of thought it ultimately challenges the cult of the image and the role of the artist who creates them.

   

MUMU is a project in which the artists Malevich, De Kooning and Barnet Newman are involved in dialogues regarding their work. Mondrian paintings are twisted and forced into awkward shapes. 101 black and white plastic paintings have been lifted from a neoist internet site and reconstructed in the gallery space. Familiar totemic structures

dominate the gallery. One literally melting away, the other stuck in a continuous audio cycle. By adopting plagiarist and prankster behaviour Thomas Raat manipulates the belief structures that surround a series of well known artworks and artists. Reconstructing the dogmas that surround them and highlighting the loss of Modernist ideals that has occurred.

Believers claimed that Mu was the home of an advanced civilization. It has never been found. In the disintegration of a utopian dream pessimism finds its voice. Malice lurks at the heart of every ideal. Progress, so desperately desired, will always be a somewhat humorous and ridiculous cycle of misunderstanding.

   

Thomas Raat was born in Leiderdorp in the Netherlands in 1979 where he is currently working. He studied at the Koninklijke Academie 1997-2001 and Norwich School of Art and Design in 2000. In 2005-2006 he was accepted for a Delfina studio in London and in 2007 exhibited the solo show ‘The Horse Cure’ at Alexandre Pollazon Ltd London. He is represented by Gallrie De Expeditie, Amsterdam and in Belgium by Galerie Transit.

MUMU: Malice and Misunderstanding has been supported by the Fonds BKVB, the Mondriaan Foundation and funded by the Arts Council England.

The essays: THE PERSISTANCE OF THE PRESENT: Charlie Danby
, and, BETWEEN THE ABSOLUTE AND THE ARBITRARY: Ton de Munck, were printed in a specially editioned catalogue and are available to download below.

 

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 Thomas Raat: Ton de MunckThomas Raat: Charles Danby