General Idea
Largest exhibition overview is coming to the Netherlands
News — Feb 20, 2023
The Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam is pleased to present the largest overview of the groundbreaking Canadian artist group General Idea to date. In the 70’s and 80’s General Idea were renowned for their satirical approach to the deconstruction of the media and the art world. In keeping with the communal hippie countercultural ethos of the 1960s, General Idea started out as a larger group, and then became known as a trio, consisting of Felix Partz, Jorge Zontal and AA Bronson widely from 1969 on. General Idea came to an end in 1994, with the untimely deaths of Partz and Zontal of AIDS. Thanks to its special relationship with General Idea, the Stedelijk was honored with the donation of the General Idea Collection in 2018. Now the museum can present the largest-ever survey of their oeuvre, comprised of large sculptures and installations, paintings, videos and publications, archival material – and their signature wallpapers.
Serious humor
General Idea critiqued popular media and the art world through witty and visually arresting artworks. During the span of their 25-year career, General Idea took on mass media, consumer culture, queer identity, the art economy, social inequality, and the AIDS epidemic with their unique brand of ‘serious humor’: a subversive and absurdist approach to language and imagery, always with an earnest intent. A series of their AIDS-related works are on view in the exhibition, such as Infe©ted Mondrian, the iconic AIDS logo paintings and the AIDS Wallpaper. General Idea can be seen as pioneers of ‘creative activism’; their practice of inserting their artwork directly into the public sphere, as they did with their AIDS posters, laid the groundwork for conceptually-driven activist engagement for a new generation of artists. Their ideas about collective authorship, denying the sanctity of the unique, original work of art provided a template for artists after them to unite and collaborate as a group.
Pop Art to the next level
General Idea, like their Pop Art contemporaries, fully embraced mass media, always spinning it with their satirical and critical messages. Their involvement with all kinds of mass media was unprecedented for artists. They designed provocative merchandise for sale at their own portable shop. Their videos took on the format of TV talk shows, daytime soap operas and even the evening news. Their well-known FILE magazine was a daring parody of LIFE Magazine. They even turned the Amsterdam tram into a General Idea artwork, when they covered it in their AIDS logo. General Idea always encouraged the public to interact with their work playfully, through mail art, in museums, and on the street. Although their work precedes the digital age, General Idea’s strategies of infiltrating found formats, obscuring authorship, original and copy, and using art to reach a mass audience is central to the contemporary practice of many artists and can be found widely in digital and social media.
Amsterdam: second home
Publication
The large-scale exhibition is accompanied by the equally monumental publication General Idea – a visual survey of General Idea’s artworks, from their earliest performances and actions to their use of consumer and advertising media in the public realm to their gallery and museum work. Editor: Adam Welch, with contributions of David Balzer, AA Bronson, Diedrich Diederichsen, Dominic Johnson, Theodore Kerr, Alex Kitnick, Sholem Krishtalka, Élisabeth Lebovici, Philip Monk, Diana Nemiroff, and Beatrix Ruf. JRP|Editions, 756 pages, 500 illustrations, ISBN 978-3-03764-585-7.
Public Program
The exhibition will be accompanied by an audio tour, with a special emphasis on the places that are significant to the history of General Idea in Amsterdam. There will be English-language free short introductions to the show each weekend. On Saturday 10 June 2023 the public program Meet the Masters will be entirely dedicated to General Idea. The contents of this program will be announced in the upcoming weeks.
Note for editors
For more information and press images you are welcome to contact the Press Office of the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, pressoffice@stedelijk.nl