Artist: Eva Hide
Exhibition title: Kammerspiel
Venue: ADA, Rome, Italy
Date: December 5, 2020 – February 13, 2021
Photography: Roberto Apa / all images copyright and courtesy of the artist and ADA, Rome
Eva Hide’s apologue works reveal themselves as plastic still frames. “Frozen” instants extracted from a long movie, as well as from a perturbing and disturbing favolaccia (lit. bad fairy tale) that dares to tell a story, echoing David Lynch’s dreamlike abysses – i.e. recalling the deformed child in Erasehead, or Joseph Merrick’s hurtful, separated, and discriminated world in The Elephant Man. And yet other references draw from Goya’s maniera oscura (obscure manner(s)) – more dysfunctional and horrific than the Quadritos – and from the Expressionist practises in cinema which Eva Hide draws from as a form of natural disposition […].
Their objective depiction of reality makes room to a more perceptive dimension, which is then transfigured by corruption and degradation, as this is what human nature inflicts to itself. In that special unity of place originating from the abstraction of the context of normality, the most delicate creatures in the collective minds – pets, bunnies, kids, flowers and fruits – shipwreck in the storm of psychic neurosis, ambiguous identities, and past violence. Along with them, also daily symbols, objects from joyful moments, the most fragile thoughts and feelings, the reassuring rhetoric illusions also shipwreck. […] “it won’t be all fine,” this is what Eva Hide seems to repeat. Behind that abused face of things, in the obscure labyrinths of our homes, inside of us, as a song says, little and big daily silent crimes happen. Covered up by hypocrisy.
The indissoluble bond between death and sexuality, loneliness and diversity characterizing Eva Hide’s work explains the aggressive and exhibited presence of sexual shape, both masculine and feminine. [Their work exacerbates] objects of desire and pleasure, but also the paroxysmal synecdoche of violence that overwhelms innocence, ambiguous miscommunication, and the hypothalamic chaos. The exposed and caricatural sex gives life to a deliberated pornography seeking liberation utopias, which alludes to the need of love and to the constant danger burdening the innocence of the world.
The static frame, the close-up view, the strong contrasts, the sharp figures with Expressionist cinematic make-up and the oppressing feelings of dwelling with evil deriving from it are all elements that strongly emerge in Eva Hide’s work. Not as a model to look at, but as an elective affinity. This affinity is counterbalanced by yet another distinctive and poetic element, which unmarks its oeuvre and makes it even freer from definition: the sense of game, of transgressive mockery, the shameless courage to practise light irony like a smile – heavy like a pain, but yet able to enlighten obscurity.
Kammerspiel is an invitation to an intimate dialogue to those who are willing to carefully listen to Eva Hide’s Favola Nera da Camera.Abstract from:
Francesco Castellani, Welcome to Eva Hide’s cinema, 2020
Solo shows include: Dad is God , Traffic gallery, Bergamo (2017); Tu non costruirai mai più per me, Artcore gallery, Bari (2014). Group shows: BACC, Scuderie Aldobrandini, Frascati, curated by Jasmine Pignatelli (2018); Cosmologia domestica, MIDEC, Laveno Mombello (Varese) | curated by Fabio Carnaghi (2016); Notre avenir est dans l’air, Antiquarium Alda Levi, Milano, curated by Fabio Carnaghi (2015); Thesaurus, Terme di Como Romana, Como, curated by Fabio Carnaghi (2015).
Francesco Castellani is a film and tv director, filmmaker, visual artist. Teacher of History of Television and TV shows at Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera, Milano.
Eva Hide, Kammerspiel, 2020, exhibition view, ADA, Rome
Eva Hide, Kammerspiel, 2020, exhibition view, ADA, Rome
Eva Hide, Kammerspiel, 2020, exhibition view, ADA, Rome
Eva Hide, Kammerspiel, 2020, exhibition view, ADA, Rome
Eva Hide, Rabbit, 2019, painted majolica, 31 x 20 x 27 cm
Eva Hide, Bakery, 2019, painted majolica, 27 x 28 x 16 cm
Eva Hide, America, 2019, painted majolica, 13 x 13,5 x 20,5 cm
Eva Hide, Disappeared flowers, 2019, painted majolica, 28,5 x 26 x 25 cm
Eva Hide, A penny for your thoughts, 2019, painted majolica, 31,5 x 14 x 23 cm
Eva Hide, Mom, 2018, painted majolica, 24 x 24 x 18 cm
Eva Hide, Earth eaters, 2019, painted majolica, 21 x 25 x 36 cm
Eva Hide, Forgotten, 2017, painted majolica, 23 x 22 x 25,6 cm
Eva Hide, Bedside Lamps, 2019, painted majolica, 21,5 x 22 x 26 cm
Eva Hide, Gloss black, 2018, painted majolica, 30,5 x 31 x 20 cm
Eva Hide, Ludwig, 2019, painted majolica, 30 x 28 x 29,5 cm
Eva Hide, Playground, 2018, painted majolica, 39,5 x 22 x 23 cm
Eva Hide, Room 317, 2019, painted majolica, 39,5 x 22 x 23 cm
Eva Hide, My dad loves me, 2017, painted majolica, 11 x 25,5 x 14 cm each
Eva Hide, Thanksgiving Day, 2018, painted majolica, 26,5 x 18,5 x 29 cm
Eva Hide, Nobody is at home, 2019, painted majolica, 29 x 23,5 x 22 cm
Eva Hide, Merry Christmas, 2019, painted majolica, 29 x 23,5 x 22 cm