Current language: English

Evil Flowers

Starting with Odilon Redon’s charcoal drawing Fleur du mal in the Sammlung Scharf-Gerstenberg, this exhibition traces a path from early modern art to contemporary works, shedding light on the influence that Charles Baudelaire’s well-known, eponymous collection of poems has had on art.

  • Alexander Kanoldt, Porträt der Tochter Angelina, Detail, 1935

    Alexander Kanoldt, Porträt der Tochter Angelina, Detail, 1935

  • Odilon Redon (Bordeaux 1840–1916 Paris), Fleur du mal, Detail, um 1890

    Odilon Redon (Bordeaux 1840–1916 Paris), Fleur du mal, Detail, um 1890

  • René Magritte (Lessines 1898–1967 Brüssel), Les fleurs du mal, Detail, 1946

    René Magritte (Lessines 1898–1967 Brüssel), Les fleurs du mal, Detail, 1946

  • Hannah Höch (1889 Gotha – 1978 Berlin (West)), Les fleurs du mal, Detail, 1922–1924

    Hannah Höch (1889 Gotha – 1978 Berlin (West)), Les fleurs du mal, Detail, 1922–1924

  • Moritz Wehrmann (* 1980), Les Fleurs du Mal (I), Detail, 2012

    Moritz Wehrmann (* 1980), Les Fleurs du Mal (I), Detail, 2012

  • Odilon Redon (Bordeaux 1840–1916 Paris), Cul-de-lampe (Schlussvignette), Illustration für Les Fleurs du mal von Charles Baudelaire, Detail, 1891

    Odilon Redon (Bordeaux 1840–1916 Paris), Cul-de-lampe (Schlussvignette), Illustration für Les Fleurs du mal von Charles Baudelaire, Detail, 1891

  • Gernot Bubenik, Pflanze Nr. VIII, Detail, 1968

    Gernot Bubenik, Pflanze Nr. VIII, Detail, 1968

Alongside presenting a selection of works directly related to the poems, such as Hannah Höch’s painting Les Fleurs du mal (1922‒24) and Albert Birkle’s work Die kleinen Alten (1923), the exhibition also addresses individual topics such as beauty and decay or artifice and nature.

Les Fleurs du mal (1857), a volume of poetry by Charles Baudelaire (1821‒1867), is a milestone of world literature. First published in Paris in 1857, it provoked a scandal that led to a trial against Baudelaire. The poems laid the foundation for a new aesthetic in literature and art, breaking away from the classical notion of unity between beauty and goodness. Concepts of excessivity, proliferation, and wild blooming play an important role. Often, goodness only begins to slip into evil because of its exaggeration. The main focuses of the exhibition explore eroticism and intoxication, the aestheticisation of disease and decay, the relationship between artifice and nature, the concept of surrogates, and even kitsch.

The exhibition presents around 120 works. In addition to paintings, drawings, and graphic art, photographs, film clips, and digital media are also on view, as are objects and installations. The show includes Otto Piene’s (1928‒2014) large-scale Fleur du mal (1969) installation: 13 giant flowers made of black artificial silk, which, from within the darkness of the Sahurê Hall, bloom every hour on the hour under the effects of stroboscopic lightning storms and deafening noise.

Curator: Kyllikki Zacharias, director of the Sammlung Scharf-Gerstenberg, is curating the exhibition.

Runtime: Thu, 12/12/2024 to Sun, 04/05/2025

Price info: Museum ticket Scharf-Gerstenberg Collection

Price: €10.00

Reduced price: €5.00

Takes place here:

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