Andrea Rosen Gallery to Display Mika Rottenberg Exhibit at Palias de Tokyo, 6/22

By: Jun. 20, 2016
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

Andrea Rosen Gallery is thrilled to announce Mika Rottenberg's solo exhibition at the Palais de Tokyo, opening June 22, 2016. Nearly a decade after her first solo exhibition in France at La Maison Rouge, since then followed by ten major museum exhibitions worldwide, Mika Rottenberg (born in 1976, in Buenos Aires) will stage her most comprehensive survey exhibition to date. The labyrinthine exhibition will feature several of the major video installations that have consolidated her international reputation, including her most recent NoNoseKnows (2015), lauded at the 56th Venice Biennale, Bowls Balls Souls Holes (2014), SEVEN (2011), and Squeeze (2010), as well as recent and new sculptural works produced specifically for the exhibition.

Mika Rottenberg uses video installation to probe contemporary formations of labor, the feminization of globalization, and the production of value. Weaving documentary elements into her visual fictions, she creates elaborate narratives that unfold in parallel worlds to describe how objects and bodies are packaged, cultivated, circulated, and maintained. Her works draw on cinematic and sculptural traditions to forge a new language about the manufacturing of consumer goods, as well as to question how our own affective relationships are increasingly monetized.

A monographic publication will be published by Palais de Tokyo in conjunction with the exhibition.

Mika Rottenberg is curated by Daria de Beauvais.

Mika Rottenberg was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1976, and raised in Israel. She currently lives and works in New York. Rottenberg's work has been exhibited internationally at such institutions as: The 56th Venice Biennale; the Israel Museum, Jerusalem; Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall; FRAC Languadoc-Roussillon, Montpellier; Nottingham Contemporary, UK; M - Museum Leuven, Belgium; De Appel Arts Centre, Amsterdam; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; La Maison Rouge, Paris; KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin; and PS1 Contemporary Art Center, New York.




Videos