Jonas Mekas: REQUIEM

Jonas Mekas: REQUIEM

Mekas Foundation / CURA.

Jonas Mekas, Requiem (still), 2019.

April 15, 2024
Jonas Mekas
REQUIEM
April 17–21, 2024
Società Dante Alighieri Comitato di Venezia
Fondamenta Sant'Elena, 3
30132 Venice
Italy
curamagazine.com
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As part of the European première in conjunction with the 2024 Venice Biennale. Curated by Francesco Urbano Ragazzi.
April 18–21, 10am–7pm
Opening: April 17, 6:30–9pm
rsvp [​at​] curamagazine.com

During the opening week of the 60th Venice Biennale, CURA. presents Requiem, the final masterpiece by the Lithuanian-born filmmaker Jonas Mekas (Semeniškiai, 1922–New York, 2019). Curated by Francesco Urbano Ragazzi as part of the European première of the work, the project takes place just a few steps away from the Giardini della Biennale in an extraordinary location that opens its doors to contemporary art for the first time, Società Dante Alighieri. The project is made possible thanks to the support of the Estate of Jonas Mekas, the Lithuanian Culture Institute, and Zuecca Projects in collaboration with Apalazzo Gallery and Case Chiuse by Paola Clerico with the media partnership of The Brooklyn Rail.

Requiem is the last film made by Jonas Mekas and can be considered as his farewell to earthly life. Projected on two synchronized screens, a kaleidoscope of images reverberates endlessly, allowing the wonder of nature to reveal itself. Flowers of every shape and color, trees, meadows, and leaves were captured by the artist over the last thirty years of his existence using various digital mediums, from his first Sony camcorder to an ultracompact Nikon. However, what the viewers see unfolding before their eyes is not a depiction of earthly paradise. At times, the floral imagery alternates with tragic scenes of wars, fires, and floods captured by Mekas’s camera from a distance, on television screens or newspapers. Rather than an Eden, the planet immortalized in the work appears to be the one that survived the great Flood. More than a meditation on death, the artist seems to offer a vision of life after the Anthropocene, at the end of human life.

As is typical in the films of this independent cinema poet, transcendence and reality do not move on separate planes but blend until they coincide. Despite the symbolic charge of the work, Requiem can also be viewed as a herbarium where floral varieties are represented with botanical precision. Among the flowers that appear on screen, some very special ones can be recognized. Mekas often captures with his camera the species typical of Lithuania, the land he was forced to leave in 1944 after the Soviet occupation. The search for those plants is thus part of an exercise in rooting that the artist never ceased to undertake since arriving in the United States as a refugee in 1949.

The experience of exile from one’s homeland—one of the axes around which Mekas’s filmic quest revolved—is evoked not only by Requiem but also by the location in which the work is presented on this occasion. While the film was originally created for The Shed in New York, in its Venice première, the video installation is exhibited in the halls of the Società Dante Alighieri, the only institution authorized to issue language diplomas to immigrants seeking Italian citizenship. Through a short walk from the Giardini della Biennale to Sant’Elena, a hidden corner of the city’s life is revealed. The Dantean journey filmed by Mekas ideally blossoms within the walls of an institution that symbolizes language and culture as agents of social transformation. Thus, the project responds to the theme chosen for this year’s Biennale: Stranieri Ovunque—Foreigners Everywhere.

The itinerary that Requiem outlines within the city proposes an escape from the standard stages of tourism and glamourous events to rediscover art in the space of reality. This continues the journey undertaken by Francesco Urbano Ragazzi together with Jonas Mekas in 2015 with the exhibition The Internet Saga at Palazzo Foscari Contarini, a dogal palazzo converted into a fast-food restaurant. Along this route of exhibition projects, new dimensions of the city have been revealed over the years: from Teatro Italia with Kenneth Goldsmith’s Hillary. The Hillary Clinton Emails to the Casa di Reclusione Femminile della Giudecca with Adoration by Pauline Curnier Jardin.

To accompany this imaginative movement, a selection of publications from CURA.’s extensive catalog will be available inside the space.

Open hours
10am–7pm

Partners
CURA., Lithuanian Culture Institute, Estate of Jonas Mekas, Società Dante Alighieri Venezia, Zuecca Projects Venice, APALAZZOGALLERY, The Brooklyn Rail, Case Chiuse by Paola Clerico.

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April 15, 2024

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