Venus Rebellion Collage © (im Uhrzeigersinn) Miriam Lenk, Annika van Vugt, Bea Emsbach, Fides Becker, Laura Baginski, Rokudenashiko, Annegret Soltau, 2025
Opening
Thursday, April 24, 2025 | 6 pm
Words of welcome
Philip Kojo Metz, Board Member, Deutscher Künstlerbund
Introduction
Katharina Schilling, Artist and independent curator
Hours of opening
Tuesday – Friday | 2 – 6 pm
Gallery Weekend
Friday, May 02, 2025 | noon – 9 pm
Saturday, May 03, 2025 | noon – 7 pm
Sunday, May 04, 2025 | noon – 5 pm
About the exhibition
To mark the 75th anniversary of its re-founding in 1950, the Deutscher Künstlerbund is devoting itself to the highly topical subject of »gender equality«. The exhibition by the artist group »Venus Rebellion« kicks off with provocative, body-focused art. The seven female artists from three generations are united by an intense examination of gender identity and the exploration of the complex, often paradoxical conditions of femininity. The experience of one's own body and the search for a self-determined, unobstructed view are central themes in their works.
They show images of female autonomy: of pleasure and pain, of power and creativity, of tenderness, connectednessand loss, of cycles and transformation. In a broad media spectrum of drawing, painting, sculpture, photography, video and installation, a haunting, thematically condensed atmosphere is created between the works, which appear quite differently among each other.
In view of this abundance of female diversity and heterogeneity, it becomes obvious how much there is still a lack
of such female perspectives, especially regarding body parts such as breasts or vulva. When we look back at our Western cultural history, we see images of women that were almost exclusively created by men. Even though significant progress has been made in recent years, our perception remains heavily influenced by a millennia-old patriarchal tradition of appropriation and tabooing of the female body, as well as a concept of gender in which the penis is defined as the normative ideal to be revered, while the vulva is seen as a disturbing and deficient deviation. To this day, this gender bias makes it difficult for many women and female-identifying individuals to relate positively to their own bodies. At the same time, it facilitates the exercise of oppression and violence against them. After all, those who do not know their own bodies, who are not allowed to feel at home in them, are less able to assert themselves.
This also reveals the political urgency of body-related art, as shown by »Venus Rebellion« at the Deutscher Künstler-bund. For in the creation of autonomous images of the female experience, the basic principle of the binary gender model, on which male superiority feeds, is undermined: the illusion that the female sex and female pleasure exist only passively in relation to the male sex. The negation of gender diversity on the part of right-wing conservatives and their increasingly massive fight against feminist and queer movements can also be understood in this way, as it is about nothing less than the control of sexuality and the preservation of patriarchal power structures.
»With our art, we want to address people who are looking for positive self-images outside the usual stereotypical image culture and thus more self-acceptance, and contribute to the fact that female realities of life become more present and recognized in the general perception. We seek to show the significance of existential and political self-determination over one’s own body and the transformative potential it holds for society.«
«So if a decisive factor for actual equality is the imagery that enable women and people outside the male norm to reclaim their bodies, then that is exactly what the artists offer: visionary visual worlds that break taboos and can expose and overcome the hidden matrix according to which our society functions.
About the artists
The sculptor Laura Baginski creates figurative sculptures of great sensual intensity, focusing on explicit depictions of the vulva and autonomous female pleasure, including the act of masturbation. In her video work »Lustsubjekte«, a vulva merges with images of nature to create associative images that suggest an understanding of lust as the driving force of all life.