Kerim Ragimov

1994

Painting, 60 x 90 cm.
Materials: oil on canvas

Collection: Collection M HKA, Antwerp (Inv. no. S0289).

The Human Project consists primarily of hand-painted copies made by the artist himself of a large variety of (more or less symbolically laden) group portraits taken from magazines and similarly mundane photographic material; the work’s totalizing ambition is to present a visual anthropology of twentieth-century humanity – an exemplarily humanist undertaking, one might infer. At the same time, however, Ragimov’s play with both technique and pictorial conventions strongly alludes to the history of Soviet representations of history, and to the well-known fact that no such representation can ever be innocent again. Adapting his choice of technique and means of execution to the specific traits or ‘ideological’ content of the medium through which a particular image is depicted, a scene from a Soviet-era magazine, for example, will be rendered in a fitting red glow.

About M HKA / Mission Statement

The M HKA is a museum for contemporary art, film and visual culture in its widest sense. It is an open place of encounter for art, artists and the public. The M HKA aspires to play a leading role in Flanders and to extend its international profile by building upon Antwerp's avant-garde tradition. The M HKA bridges the relationship between artistic questions and wider societal issues, between the international and the regional, artists and public, tradition and innovation, reflection and presentation. Central here is the museum's collection with its ongoing acquisitions, as well as related areas of management and research.

About M HKA Ensembles

The M HKA Ensembles represent our first steps towards initiating the public to today's art-related digital landscape. With the help of these new media, our aim is to offer our artworks a better and fuller array of support for their presentation and public understanding.