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Discovering the image at CaixaForum’s ’Una certa foscor’

In 1911 the Mona Lisa was stolen from the Lou­vre in Paris. It was not missed for over 24 hours. Af­ter­wards, the gap left on the wall be­came this Parisian gallery’s main at­trac­tion. In the two years be­fore the po­lice re­cov­ered this da Vinci paint­ing, hoards of peo­ple- in­clud­ing Franz Kafka- queued to see the gap. Many of them had never be­fore en­tered the Lou­vre.

Today vis­i­tors crowd in to see the Mona Lisa, but the fact is they don’t man­age to see it ei­ther. At best, they snap a pic on their phones that gets buried in the stack of im­ages pro­duced and in­ces­santly ac­cu­mu­lated and the image has lit­tle chance of af­fect­ing them or mak­ing them think. How many im­ages do we fail to no­tice or for­get in a heart­beat?

The ex­hi­bi­tion Una certa fos­cor (a kind of dark­ness) re­flects on our vi­su­ally anes­thetized so­ci­ety. It’s on until Jan­u­ary 5 at Caix­aFo­rum as part of the Comis­art pro­gram, which is en­cour­ag­ing young cu­ra­tors to in­ter­pret this fi­nan­cial in­sti­tu­tion’s mod­ern art col­lec­tion afresh. This ex­hi­bi­tion was cu­rated by the bril­liant Alexan­dra Laudo.

Laudo took the kid­nap­ping of the fa­mous da Vinci paint­ing as the ex­hi­bi­tion’s start­ing point, “It is the im­ages that are re­sis­tant to us, it is the im­ages we do not see, that en­cour­age our de­sire to see,” says Laudo.

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