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Nothing too Beautiful for the Gods - Altars and Contemporary Creation

Art contemporain - Publisher 5 Continents - Cartonné - 192 pages - Text in Bilingue Français / English - Published in 2025

The book aims to show the variety of works connected with the spiritual impulse, from those used in religious rites to contemporary artworks that refer to them.

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in this language
Model 9791254600870
Artist Art contemporain
Author Sous la direction de Jean-Hubert Martin
Publisher 5 Continents
Format Cartonné
Number of pages 192
Language Bilingue Français / English
Dimensions 270 x 225
Technique(s) 90 illustrations en couleurs
Published 2025
Museum Fondation Opale Lens, Suisse

Exhibition Catalogue Nothing too Beautiful for the Gods. Altars and Contemporary Creation, presented at the Fondation Opale Lens, Switzerland (December 15, 2024 – April 25, 2025).

The exhibition and accompanying book bring together altars from Africa, the Caribbean and Asia, works by artists invested with religious responsibilities (Didi, Shiraga), works by religious artists (Ramoun) and others by artists who refer explicitly to religions and spirituality (Sooja Kim, El Anatsui, Vasquez de la Horra, Bedia, Boltanski, Viola).

Globalisation has forced us to stop thinking that art only exists in the West. The very notion of art was invented by the West and refers to the learned version of its material culture. It was then projected onto other civilisations, particularly Asian ones, and finally onto the pre-literate societies of Africa and Oceania.

Whether or not these cultures possess the concept of art is of little importance, because when they honour their gods, they inevitably address what they consider to be the acme of beauty. For a long time, this openness to other aesthetics was based on the arts of the past, until it was finally accepted that there were living creators in these distant lands, and that today’s means of communication have brought them closer to us. These “others” who appeared in the 1980s are by no means a homogenous group. Without stretching this analysis too far, they can be regarded as falling into two categories: those who have opted for modernity and submit to the demands of the market and Western-based institutions, and those who concentrate on giving visual expression to their communities and beliefs, ignoring the demands of the art market. Australian Aboriginal art represents an intermediate situation, since alongside art of a sacred nature, there are works deliberately produced for sale, initially encouraged by missionaries.

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