Gina Folly: Quasitutto I (José beim Entsorgen aus einer Garage), 2023. C-Print © Gina Folly, 2023

Basel | ArtRegion: Basel - Oberrhein

Kunstmuseum Basel | Gegenwart

Gina Folly: Autofocus

2023 Manor Art Prize

6. Mai – 1. Oktober 2023

The 2023 Manor Art Prize goes to the artist Gina Folly (b. Zurich, 1983; lives and works in Basel and Paris). Folly’s work explores the potentials of photography, expanding the medium by developing novel formats, materials, and modes of presentation. The photographic gaze anchors a practice in which she analyzes and reflects on environments and experiences.

Folly’s multilayered pictures, sculptures, and installations examine emotions and interpersonal relationships in her everyday life. Bringing situations, places, and objects into focus, her works interrogate commonsense conceptions of permeability and demarcation, naturalness and artificiality, or private and public spaces. They often turn the spotlight on what is inconspicuous and typically eludes our conscious attention. The artist charts a sensitive and critical response to the mechanisms of trivialization and marginalization associated with the values, codes, visual systems, or cultural-political structures that inform and govern our lives.

For her exhibition Autofocus at Kunstmuseum Basel | Gegenwart, Gina Folly is developing two new series of photographic works around the themes of ‘being needed’ and ‘being in use.’ The works address systems of social and economic relations and possible forms of an intergenerational transfer of agency and knowledge, negotiating the conditions of human existences and seeking to dismantle established hierarchies.

For Autofocus, Folly works with members of the association Quasitutto, a self-described “small service provider mostly run by retired women and men” who have set up a platform on which they offer all kinds of service—from gardening, decluttering, and installing TV and internet service to repairing old devices. The association, Folly argues, sets an example of why elderly citizens should flout the unwritten rules of retirement—the allegedly inevitable dead end of their economic and social existence—: taking initiative and banding together in a collective, they can unlock opportunities for fulfilling engagement. The artist shadows the members during their activities, photographing them with a medium-format analog camera. Giving the stage to a demographic that is marginalized by our society’s system, she probes the question of how individual benefit and social utility are connected.


Öffnungszeiten

Di-So 11–18

Kunstmuseum Basel | Gegenwart
St. Alban-Rheinweg 60
4010 Basel

Öffentlicher Verkehr

Tram 2 bis Kunstmuseum