Bill Viola: Passions, 11.04.-20.07.2014
Powerful Images of Fundamental Human Experience
Bill Viola (b. 1951 in New York) is generally recognized as one of the major international representatives of video art. Jointly with the Community of the Cathedral of Berne, the Kunstmuseum Bern is presenting the first solo exhibition to take place in Switzerland of this exceptional artist since his show here in 1993 at the Musée cantonal des Beaux-Arts Lausanne. While the Cathedral of Berne showcases the artist’s more recent videos addressing spiritual content, the Kunstmuseum Bern is mounting early works by the artist from its collection with a focus on theoretical questions related to perception and video art.
For over 30 years, Bill Viola has been creating video installations, sound environments, electronic music performances and TV productions. He made a major contribution toward establishing video as a key medium of contemporary art, expanding its scope as regards technology, content and historical context.
A shift to spiritual issues
Viola’s video installations immerse
their viewers totally in worlds of images and sound. Using the most-advanced
technology, this artist strives for perfection in precision and in the power of
his imagery. Since the 1990s, Viola’s art has increasingly turned to
examining universal human experience and spiritual questions. He explores the
fundamental experiences of our existence such as birth, remembrance, death and
awakening consciousness. In the 1970s,
Viola pursued an interdisciplinary degree in the visual arts and in electronic
music in Experimental Studios at the College of Visual and Performing Arts at
Syracuse University in New York. He visited courses on Eastern philosophy,
perceptual theories, physics, electronics, religion and mysticism—subjects that
still influence his work today. The people in his artworks are faced with
similar existential issues regardless of their cultural, historical or
religious backgrounds.
An overview of the rich oeuvre of a conjuror
of imagery
The Kunstmuseum Bern already purchased works by Bill Viola in the 1990s and
thereby early established this pioneer of video art in its collection. The four
artworks chosen for the exhibition at the Kunstmuseum—with one to two video
projections per room distributed throughout building—reveal Bill Viola’s
investigations of the phenomena of sense perception and how they are involved
in human processes of self-awareness. The Cathedral of Berne features five
recent works by this veritable conjuror of images, addressing subjects such as
cleansing and purification, transformation, suffering and commiseration. The
sum of both exhibition sites gives a rounded view of both Bill Viola’s
stylistic development as well as the shift in the focus of his content, while
offering an overview of the comprehensive oeuvre of this outstanding American
artist.
Tradition and the present in a powerful
dialogue
With his video art, Viola takes his place in a long tradition of figural
representation and existential subject matter in art. Bill Viola’s lyrical
video screenings partake in a dialogue with the representation of the Christian
subject matter of suffering and the Passion in the glass-window painting and
sculptures of the awe-inspiring surroundings of the Cathedral of Berne. Much of
the older art is very hard for many of us to comprehend today. The exhibition
title Passions refers not only to the time of the Passiontide, when the
exhibition will be opening its doors to the public, but also to the Passion as
the prototypical Christian experience and the fact that above all humanity
finds its expression in dealing with suffering and misfortune. But Viola does
not just tackle purely Christian themes. He equally addresses worldly
experiences and occurrences, giving us a deeper insight into life and humanity
in the juxtaposition with traditional Christian art—and within the religious
context of the Cathedral of Berne. Viola thus makes tradition comprehensible
again to the contemporary viewing public, breathing fresh life into it with his
new narratives.
Contact person: Brigit Bucher, , Tel.: +41 31 328 09 21
Images: Marie Louise Suter, , Tel.: +41 31 328 09 53