Angela Maasalu at Des Bains and Lungley Gallery / London
Artist(s): Angela Maasalu
Curator: Maria Valeria Biondo and Mark Lungley
Art space: Des Bains and Lungley Gallery, London
Address: 20 Great Portland Street, W1W 8QR London and 37 Foley Street, W1W 7TN London
Duration:
20/02/2025 -
20/03/2025
Credits: Reliant Imaging
Social media info: Text by Orlando Reade
The Wizard of Oz premiered in 1939, three weeks before the beginning of the Second World War. Propelled by a tornado out of Kansas and into Munchkinland, an American girl goes on a quest to find the Wizard of Oz. On her way, Dorothy encounters a tinman without a heart, a scarecrow without a brain, and a cowardly lion, and they accompany her. By the end, the four friends have learned how to find what they are lacking inside of themselves.
Courage – from the Latin noun cor, meaning heart – is generally understood to be something found inside. This exhibition’s title comes from a phrase that Angela Maasalu noticed soon after she migrated to London from Estonia: Take Courage. What might it mean? ‘Take Courage,’ as the artist discovered some time later, is an advertising slogan for a bitter British ale. The phrase stuck. Perhaps because it reminds us that there are external objects from which we draw courage, an idea that might help illuminate this new body of work.
In Angela Maasalu’s paintings, we encounter a strange series of figures. A woman bites a lion’s paw; the horses on the merry-go-round are bleeding on their poles; in a keyhole, an infant is smoking. The harlequin is crying. They are surrounded by a swirling miasma that is shining, delirious, and beautiful. There is tenderness here, and a sense of humour, partly submerged. Like Dorothy, we might want to work out what to take from this world.
Maasalu’s work seems to belong to a Surrealist tradition. They recall the mystical paintings of Paul Chagall, the red curtained spaces of David Lynch’s films, and the apocalyptic altarpieces of fifteenth- century painter Matthias Grünewald. The Surrealist movement was born in a world recovering from one war and sleepwalking towards another. Their spokesmen proposed, through a synthesis of Freud and Marx, a solution to the imperial war machine. By presenting images of a deregulated unconscious, Surrealism would help modern society to purge its aggressive wishes.
Today, after Surrealism’s appropriation by the advertising industry, we might feel sceptical about that claim. But some of its initial spirit is alive in Maasalu’s work. These paintings contain a kind of disturbing content, but they don’t seem designed to inspire shock or fear.
Images that might elsewhere disturb are presented in a form that makes them available for enjoyment and analysis. Like the dreamer, we know that what we see is us too. By showing how the strange is familiar, and the threatening cowardly, these paintings might give courage.
@angelamaasalu "Taking Courage" @des.bains & @lungleygallery
20 February – 20 March 2025
photo credits: @reliant.imaging
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