How does Simone de Beauvoir's 1949 book The Second Sex read today for an artist? And how does it affect the way we look at art made since the book was published? This March, Hauser & Wirth brings a group exhibition titled Seventy Years of the Second Sex. A Conversation between Works and Words to its gallery on Limmatstrasse in Zurich, to initiate a reflection on Beauvoir's milestone study with, and through, contemporary art. At the dawn of the seventieth anniversary of the book's first English translation (1953), this exhibition, curated by Dr. Sophie Berrebi, brings together works by Louise Bourgeois, Geta Brătescu, Eva Hesse, Roni Horn, Zoe Leonard, Lee Lozano, Annaïk Lou Pitteloud, Cindy Sherman and Lorna Simpson and that converse with Simone de Beauvoir's ideas and their legacy.
The Second Sex dissects the ways in which, through history and through stages of personal life, woman is defined within patriarchy, as other. Steeped in existentialism and phenomenology, and drawing on sources from fiction, literary testimonies, sociology and psychoanalysis, the book enacted a dialogue with the civil rights movement, set the stage for the second wave of feminism, and laid the ground for theorisations of gender. Some aspects are inevitably dated, but Beauvoir's persuasive and implacable exposé of woman's alienation through mechanisms of social, economic, and psychological domination, remains ultimately a formidable call to action and transformation of society.
Dr. Sophie Berrebi writes: 'The works on display in this exhibition in some cases appropriate ideas from 'The Second Sex'. In others, they might illuminate, muddle or complicate them or underscore the blind spots in Beauvoir's thinking. In all cases, they continue the conversation.'
While some artists like Hesse and Bourgeois refer directly to Simone de Beauvoir in their personal writings, Seventy Years of The Second Sex, A Conversation Between Works and Words presents works that stimulate different interpretations of Beauvoir's words. These interpretations are articulated through a direct engagement with themes of The Second Sex such as domestic alienation, identity, dressing up, patriarchy or the strife between immanence and transcendence. Eva Hesse's painting No title (c. 1960) is part of her very private series 'Spectres' that Hesse did not exhibit during her lifetime. In the works from this series, she 'paints herself out,' working through form and material in an act of vulnerable and even painful introspection. Louise Bourgeois' sculpture Femme Maison (1994), features a woman's figure with a house in place of the head and can be read as a direct statement about the woman being boxed into in household activities. Bourgeois' initial 'Femme Maison', a series of drawings fusing architecture and the female figure, appeared in the mid-40s, one of which is also featured in this exhibition. Lee Lozano's tool drawings and paintings, made in 1963 and 1964, can be understood as critiques of both sexual and art world decorum at a moment when the feminist movement had yet to coalesce and actively question either. These works also allowed Lozano to explore her own womanhood and her individuality as an artist at a moment when gender roles were being radically redefined.
The far-reaching influence of the book means that it can been 'read' in a variety of ways. One of these is through the writing of subsequent generations of scholars whose work take The Second Sex as reference or departure point, such as Linda Nochlin and Judith Butler. Whether or not they engage with Beauvoir's words directly, the works brought together in this exhibition all speak to her ideas and her intellectual legacy. In Vantage Point (1991) Lorna Simpson juxtaposes a verso portrait with that of a face mask, alluding to an African heritage without declaring it. The impassive figure encapsulates Simpson's opposition to the way the black and female body historically has been represented as a system of regressive biological signs. The turned-back figure resists interpretation precisely because its primary meaning actually is resistance of the physical characteristics of gender and race.
In conjunction with ‚Seventy Years of The Second Sex. Conversation between Works and Words', curated by Dr. Sophie Berrebi, Hauser & Wirth Publishers presents a reading corner in their bookshop's mezzanine (Rämistrasse 5, 8005 Zurich) with publications relating to Simone de Beauvoir's milestone study ‚The Second Sex'.
Press release courtesy Hauser & Wirth.
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