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Title: 'Future or Ruin' @ Charlie Smith Gallery, London 5 Nov 2009 View count: 101 Rating: 0 (0 ratings) Description: Rough cut vid of London group show FUTURE OR RUIN Harold de Bree, Gordon Cheung, Jana Gunstheimer, Luke Jackson, Monica Ursina Jäger, Mark McGowan, Hugh Mendes, Svein Møxvold Private View: Thurs 5 Nov 6.30pm8.30pm Exhibition Dates: Fri 6th Nov Sat 5 Dec 2009 Gallery Hours: WedSat 11am6pm or by appointment In 1921 Adolf Hitler called for a will to power when claiming that freedom can eternally be only a consequence of power and that the source of power is the will. In blaming Germanys current and projected economic misery on the repatriation terms set out by the international community in the Versailles Treaty, Hitler sought to demonise the Jewish financial community and ridicule the bolshevism of the left and nationalism of the right. Consequently, Hitler aimed to re-establish Germanys military might and imperial powerbase by promising to combine social welfare with nationalistic pride through the leadership of the National Socialist party. Throughout the decade the Nazi party continued to agitate and intimidate by using physical violence and unparalleled propaganda until they attained power in 1933, having presented two choices to the people of Germany: Future the National Socialists; or Ruin all other options. Fundamental to Hitlers rise to power were the devastating economic circumstances that Germany experienced post Word War I, providing unsettled and fertile grounds for the Nazi party. In our time the global economic crisis has again coincided with the rise of the far right throughout Europe as unemployment and immigration increase tension and resentment amongst local populations. The British National Party has secured a seat on the London Assembly as well as two European parliamentary seats; in September half of the eighty arrested in Birminghams race riots were Muslims and allied factions counter-protesting against the English Defence League; Hungary has witnessed a series of Roma and Gypsy killings that are considered the most complicated and most serious series of murders in Hungarian history; Lithuania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic and Latvia have all suffered street protests, violence and arrests as their economies contract, and unemployment and inflation rise hand in hand. Disaster and survival; apocalyptic forewarnings; democracy and fascism; power and communication; war and murder; reconstruction and re-enactment; these are the preoccupations of this cross-disciplinary selection of international artists from Britain, Germany, Netherlands, Norway and Switzerland. From de Brees mimetic remodelling of military hardware to Møxvolds warnings against the terrifying consequences of extreme nationalism via Cheung and Jägers broader consumerist and environmental concerns; from Mendes relentless documentation of deceased historical figures to McGowans brazen re-enactment of Oswald Moselys Battle of Cable Street; and Jackson and Gunstheimers complex interweaving of ideology, rationality, reality and fiction, we are confronted with a group of European artists concerned with very European problems. Tags: contemporary, london, art, exhibition, harold, de, bree, gordon, cheung, jana, gunstheimer, luke, jackson, monica, ursina, jäger, mark, mcgowan, hugh, mendes, svein, møxvold, Author: RCAPAINTER |