EVELYNE AXELL
VENUS, LEDA & MONA LISA

28 APRIL – 2 JUNE 2018

“My world, for all its aggressiveness, is brimming with unconditional zest for life. My motif is clear: Nudity and femininity represent the utopia of a bio-botanical freedom – a freedom, which is immune to frustration and gradual repression, a freedom, which tolerates only the limits, it sets for itself.” Evelyne Axell
 
Evelyne Axell's (1935 - 1972) work has reached cult status. Her work can be seen as one of the highlights of pop art – an art form, whose protagonists only gradually find recognition. Despite being on exhibition in renowned institutions such as Centre Pompidou in Paris, Tate Modern in London, Brooklyn Museum in New York and Kunsthalle Wien, Axell's work is representative of an era whose potential is only recently being acknowledged. 

In the late 60s and early 70s, the Belgian artist, who worked under the name Axell in order to obscure her gender, developed a subversive imagery that oscillates between female actionism and seduction and unfolds a protofeminist force. Strong women, like the first female astronaut Walentina Tereschkowa or the US activist Angela Davis, dominate the artist's imagery.  As hinted at in the exhibition title, Axell engages with both contemporary stereotypes of femininity as well as centuries old role ascriptions and correctively intervenes in persistent gender relations: reflecting on art history – such as Venus iconography, Leda with the Swan depictions and distinguished portraits like Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa –  she subverts historically sedimented, male perceptions of femininity and renegotiates the socially constructed image of women as either 'angel in the house' or femme-fatale. 

The duplication and repetition of the female nude and the reclaiming of the depicted body – as can be seen in the artist's self-portraits – deconstruct the dominant rules of authorship: Axell switches sides and trades her role as muse for that of producer. In Le peintre (1971) she confidently inserts herself into a fictive genealogy of self-portraits, demonstrating a natural-seeming joy at making art. Axell's view towards masculinity is a critical one. She shows men as voyeurs, depicts the male gender as symbolically reduced, and ironically pokes fun at macho behavior. The status symbol 'car', for instance, is a recurring theme in Axell's work; one that she subjects to a symbolic reconfiguration: In Axell-ération (1965) a woman in red high-heels has her foot on the pedal and Changement de vitesse (1965) shows a woman's naked calves enveloping the gearshift. In Auto-stop (1965), a work gesturing towards Diego Velázquez's La Venus del Espejo, the artist scrutinizes the power dynamic inherent in the gaze.

Art, for Axell, evolved into a weapon of provocative self-empowerment, which she yielded against the objectification of women in post-war society. Her protofeminist imagery, which draws on pop's depiction of reality as heavily mediatized and therefore ultimately constructed, seeks representation of women's perspectives and female desire. At least until actual gender equality is achieved, Axell's sensual impetus will remain culturally and politically relevant.

FEATURED ARTIST

EVELYNE AXELL

Evelyne Axell (b. 1935 in Namur, Belgium) began her career as a TV presenter, becoming a charismatic and acclaimed theatre and film actress in Paris and Brussels, as well as a scriptwriter. In 1964, due to the misogyny inherent within the film industry, she decided to quit her promising acting career to pursue painting. It was during the filming of one of her husband’s documentaries, “Dieu est-il Pop?”, that she met in London with Allen Jones, Peter Phillips, Pauline Boty, Peter Blake, Patrick Caulfield, and Joe Tilson. She then decided to embrace Pop Art. 

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