Mona Hatoum: Domestic Disturbance
Mar 17, 2001 - Feb 4, 2002
Galleries
Mona Hatoum's complicated relationship to the domestic, is played out with reserved drama in Domestic Disturbance, an exhibition of 15 new works shown at MASS MoCA from March 17, 2001 through February 4, 2002. The sculptures, installation, and video were made during a residency at the Creux de l'Enfer, an exhibition space in an old knife factory in Thiers, France. The fact that these works were made in and for a former industrial space of the 19th century makes MASS MoCA - itself a former 19th-century factory complex - a uniquely apt American venue for the works.
This exhibition, organized by MASS MoCA with SITE Santa Fe, was the most comprehensive and extensive presentation of a single theme in Hatoum's work to date.
The focus of the Hatoum exhibition was a threatening, yet darkly comical, kitchen implement: La Grande Broyeuse (Mouli-Julienne x17), 1999 (image left). Hatoum based this massive black steel work on an old slicer, a hand-cranked precursor to the modern food processor, that she found in her mother's cupboard in Lebanon. La Grande Broyeuse's spindly legs and tail-like crank give it the appearance of gigantic creature, but its scale - sized for humans - is ominous indeed. For Hatoum, the instrument represents the domestic sphere, a sphere she presents at a confusing scale and full of potential violence.
No Way III (1996)
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