Mari Chordà
Exhibition
05.07.2024

Mari Chordà

... And Many Other Things
Mari Chordà. "Llàgrimes", 1966.

Image, language and social action are the foundations of the work of Mari Chordà and an integral part of her life: the artist, the writer and poet, and the activist form an unbreakable bond and a basis for an attitude and convictions that make up the backbone of her work and biography. As well as being an active, attentive observer of the reality around her, she takes part in it, shaking up and subverting everything she sees, guided by a political stance that emerged as a response to the Francoist dictatorship and endured in the form of feminist struggles for the visibility and recognition of women’s work. 

The aesthetic references in Mari Chordà’s work are completely alien both to the academicist, anachronistic environment of the School of Fine Arts where she studied and to the art scene at the time when she started to form her own language. Her imaginary is close to the visual sensitivity of pop art and psychedelia, but she has never considered herself a pop artist. A pioneer in her generation in terms of discussing sexual freedom, she talks about pleasure, motherhood and lesbian relationships in her paintings and poetry. She painted her first Vagina in 1964, while she was still a student: ‘I imagined the female body on the inside, but it was an unrealistic kind of figurative art, with some recollection of its shapes.’1 She paints bodily fluids, secretions, sex organs and sex, not from a perspective of debasement, but with sensual shapes and seductive colours, in solid tones that call for a full, complete kind of eroticism. These are artworks that give off strength and vitality, in which creation is linked to sexual identity: ‘I wanted to “paint-talk” about sexual life and sexual identity.’2 Mari Chordà investigates women’s bodies through her own, but instead of portraying her face – as we expect from conventional self-portraits –  she explores and depicts herself by painting her genitals. Self-referentiality, the exploration of one’s own intimacy and the changes that take place during pregnancy are just some of the themes examined. There is no obscenity or shame of any kind when it comes to showing or talking about sex, to enjoying the body and painting it or writing poems about it. While the State, the Church, the establishment or a misunderstood morality encouraged the repression of sex and pleasure, the exacerbated sexuality in Chordà’s work represents self-affirmation and legitimises freedom and joy.  

Like other women of her generation, Mari Chordà believed that ‘the personal was political’3 and made this conviction a driving force in her life. She founded Lo Llar in Amposta: a hive of cultural activity that hosted concerts, exhibitions and endless other events. After moving to Barcelona, she and a group of other women created laSal, a collectively organised bar-library intended as a meeting place for women to talk and support each other, which gave rise to ‘laSal, edicions de les dones’, the first feminist publishing house in Spain specialising in women’s literature and essays. But laSal was also a place for having fun: ‘We devoted ourselves to generating words, generating music and, especially, generating pleasure … Pleasure is very subversive.’4 Indeed, everything Mari Chordà does is imbued with the need to enjoy and to play, understood as a key part of the fight for women’s rights

1 Sílvia Alarcón: Mari Chordà. Dones amb nom propi. Tortosa: Canal 21 Ebre, 22 de setembre del 2015. Resources: http://hemeroteca.canal21ebre.com/noticia/Mari_Chorda_a_Dones_amb_nom_propi/2166

2 Artist Interview: Mari Chordà. Londres: Tate, 2015. Recurs electrònic: https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/world-goes-pop/artist-interview/mari-chorda.

3 Mari Chordà: «A Conversation about Pop», a Jessica Morgan i Flavia Frigeri (ed.): The World Goes Pop. London: Tate Modern, 2015, p. 160 [cat. exp.].

4 Documentary I moltes altres dones. Original Idea: Sonia Trigo and Dolors Marín. Directed by Sonia Trigo, Andrea Corachán, Nacheli Beas, Marta Muñoz, Begoña Montalbán and Maria Romero García. Centre de Cultura de Dones Francesca Bonnemaison, 2007.

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dates
From July 5, 2024, to January 12, 2025
documentation
title
Mari Chordà
dates
From July 5, 2024, to January 12, 2025
title
Mari Chordà
documentation
Co-produced with
artist
Mari Chordà
Amposta, 1942
Mari Chordà (Amposta, Tarragona, 1942) is a Catalan painter, poet and feminist activist. During her studies at the School of Fine Arts in Barcelona, she began to experiment with pictorial representations of the female body. Despite the context she grew up in – the Francoist dictatorship – and her traditional Catholic upbringing, from an early age she sought to explore and subvert the situation of women through principles determined by feminism and her own personal and public commitment. In 1965, she moved to Paris for two years, where she came into contact with the artistic activity of the time. Though close to the visuality of pop art, she did not belong to the movement. In her works, she uses very bright, flat colours, which combine with sinuous, non-figurative forms. As early as 1964, she began to work on her series ‘Vagines’, in which she explored her own body, sexuality and pleasure. In fact, pleasure is fundamental in her work, acting as a form of subversion. Painting and poetry – two inseparable elements – are present throughout her career and linked to feminist convictions. In 1968, she founded Lo Llar, a place in Amposta for multicultural action and social activism, which shook up the city’s cultural life. In 1969, she began to create her mobile sculptures, designed to be interacted with to create changing forms. Mari Chordà abandoned her artistic practice from the mid-1970s to the early 1990s. During this period, she carried out various activities, including action to support working women and housewives during the lectures of the I Jornades Catalanes de la Dona (First Catalan Women’s Conference). In this context, she presented her first collection of poems, ‘…I moltes altres coses’, from which this project takes its title. It was initially presented without authorship because she considered that it belonged to all women. In 1977, alongside a group of women, she founded a unique spot in Barcelona and all of Spain, the laSal bar-library. It was designed to be a meeting place where women could share experiences, enjoy themselves and receive health and legal advice. That same year, the publisher ‘laSal, edicions de les dones’ was created, which would develop several fiction and essay collections. The publishing house would give visibility to the writing and thought of women authors in the Catalan, national and international contexts, before closing in 1996. In 1978, Mari Chordà published her second book of poems, ‘Quadern del cos i de l’aigua’. At the same time, she contributed to several magazines, debates and essays on feminism. In the early 1990s, she began to revisit her initial artistic work and started to include references to the natural world, especially the sea and what she called “cetàcies” (cetaceans, but in the feminine). In 2000, she published two new collections of poems, ‘Umbilicals’ and ‘Locomotora infidel pel passat’. That same year saw the first solo exhibition of Mari Chordà’s work, which was followed by two further monographic exhibitions in 2008 and 2017.
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Mari Chordà
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curated by
Teresa Grandas is a curator, researcher and writer who curates exhibitions at the MACBA. Her research has often focused on the artistic practices of the 1970s and particularly on the work of female artists and the countercultural scene, as well as their echoes and connections with art today. As a curator, she has been in charge of various collective and individual shows, including The Passion According to Carol Rama (MACBA, 2014; Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, 2015; Espoo Museum of Modern Art (EMMA), Espoo, Finland, 2015-2016; Irish Museum of Modern Art (IMMA), Dublin, 2016; Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea di Torino (GAM), 2016-2017), Hard gelatin. Hidden stories from the 80s (MACBA, 2016; Hiriartea Centro de Cultura Contemporánea, Pamplona, 2018), Brossa Poetry (MACBA, 2017; Artium, Vitoria, 2018; Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes y Centro Cultural Kirchner (CCK), Buenos Aires, 2019; MUAC Museo Universitario Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico City, 2021-2022) and Fina Miralles: I Am All the Selves that I Have Been (MACBA, 2021; Index – Swedish Contemporary Art Foundation and Marabouparken konsthall, Stockholm, 2022; Museo d’arte contemporanea Donnaregina (MADRE), Naples, 2022-2023).
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Mari Chordà
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