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In Minima Moralia Theodor W. Adorno said: "The
contradiction between what is made and what exists is the vital
element of art and encompasses the law of its development;
however, it is also its misery." Art cannot elude its "reason,"
and the more the artistic object approaches mass production, the
more this issue arises. "Yet works of art," says Adorno, "try to
silence it."
The beauty of Richard Mosse's photographs is
enclosed in the core of their contradiction: they show horror,
ruin, war. Yet what emerges from the camera after a technical
and selective process is not what is real, but an
attractive product, that is commercially and industrially
perfect and arouses in the viewers the (morally masked) emotion
of beauty. Romanticism was aware of this and contemporary art
did not forget about it; Mario Perniola called it the "idiocy
and splendour of modern art." However, Mosse does not seem to
hide it, noting the failed impotence of representation when
searching for symmetry with reality, similitude with the object.
Like a reporter, journalist or member of an NGO, he tries
to portray suffering, war conflicts, disasters caused by
injustice, in a journey through cities destroyed by the war, in
Bosnia, Ramallah, Beirut or Kosovo, or devastated by
catastrophes, in Iran or Pakistan.
The result is images that fascinate and amaze the viewers
with their mystery and beauty: an aesthetic product.
Mosse's first solo exhibition in Spain also includes two
videos, Yani Intifada (2005) and Jew on a Ball
(2006), which are structured as television interviews with
youths from Palestine and Israel and, as a result, come up
against the impossibility -that appears in the action of the man
that constantly falls off the ball- of media language to
stimulate the energy of affection, the difficulty of
transmission and communication in a world dominated by images,
although it is, in reality, subjected to the basic instances of
love and death. |