Fernando Bryce "El Mundo en Llamas"

Alexander and Bonin

poster for Fernando Bryce "El Mundo en Llamas"

This event has ended.

Alexander and Bonin presents the exhibition of two new works by Fernando Bryce. This exhibition will mark the first solo presentation of Bryce’s work in the United States.

Fernando Bryce’s drawings systematically re-examine the way historical events are represented and reconstructed in real time through the media. Bryce describes his work as ‘mimetic analysis,’ which involves culling archives, for advertisements, newspaper articles, propaganda pamphlets, comics, and other print materials relating to specific political developments. He then faithfully reproduces these original documents in ink on standard paper formats.

Bryce’s two most recent works, El Mundo en Llamas and Das Reich / Der Aufbau focus on representations of World War II in the popular press. El Mundo en Llamas (translates as The World in Flames) is an expansive set of 92 drawings in which headlines from major world newspapers are juxtaposed against advertisements for Hollywood films, as they were rebranded at the time for a Peruvian audience. As with many of Bryce’s projects, mainstream political coverage is weighed against the spectre of cultural imperialism; news of military maneuvers is followed by celluloid depictions of heroic pilots and femme fatales dubbed in Spanish.

For Das Reich / Der Aufbau, Bryce has reproduced in full 14 covers of two periodicals – the German language Jewish journal, Aufbau, published then in New York, and Das Reich, a weekly newspaper founded by Joseph Goebbels – spanning the months from July to October 1944. This period, after the liberation in July of the Majdanek concentration camp by the Soviet Army, marks the beginning of the end of the war. By presenting the two publications together the viewer is able to compare the topics covered and how they might fit the ideology of the given publication. In hindsight Das Reich’s headlines (“The Utmost Effort,” “Full Display of Force,” etc.) read like fantasies of increasing power in the face of impending collapse. The differing style and formatting of these publications are also telling. Das Reich, for instance, sports a neo-classical, serifed masthead followed by one central headline. Aufbau’s masthead, by contrast, is modern, fat and angular and its multiple headlines are dispersed, and printed in different fonts. Design decisions such as these reiterate larger ideological constructs – Das Reich (and National Socialism) is teutonic and monolithic whereas Aufbau (and the Allied Front) is modern and cosmopolitan.

Media

Schedule

from May 06, 2011 to June 18, 2011

Opening Reception on 2011-05-06 from 18:00 to 20:00

Artist(s)

Fernando Bryce

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