The Cleveland Museum of Art (CMA) has added “Michaël Borremans:  Hallucination and Reality” to its 2005 exhibition schedule. This  exhibition is part of the Project 244 series and will be on view  from May 22 to September 4. Admission to the museum and this  exhibition is free.   The CMA is the first solo museum exhibition of work by Mr  Borremans (Belgian, born 1963) and the only US venue showing this  exhibition. The exhibition opened in Kunst-museum Basel, Museum  für Gegenwartskunst, Switzerland (October 16, 2004, to January 9,  2005) and traveled to Belgium’s Stedelkjk Museum voor Actuele  Kunst, Ghent (February 5 to April 17), before arriving in  Cleveland.   Comprising approximately 63 small drawings and paintings on  cardboard created between 1995 and 2004, these images are  cinematic in their reference and intimate in scale. As Jeffrey D.  Grove, Weiland Family Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at  the High Museum of Art, Atlanta, and a curator of the exhibition  noted, “Michaël’s drawings are truly free of nostalgia or  sentiment. They cunningly engage the tradition of caricature,  with its tragicomic observation of social customs and behaviors  and withering indictment of society moribund but unaware.”   The essence of Borremans’s work transforms complex postwar  political ideologies into clever ruminations on the human  condition. His work comments humorously on middle-class etiquette  and restraint, and the position of the artist in contemporary  society. Many of his drawings are proposals for public monuments.   Since the mid-1990s, Mr Borremans has employed reproductions of  newspapers and photographic work from the early Twentieth Century  through today as source material. Rather than referring to the  material in its entirety, however, he zooms in on elements,  modifying and alienating his imagery from its original source.  They maintain a fascinating and mysteriously distanced  relationship to the viewer and even create the impression of  being spectral, dreamlike images.   Mr Borremans’s pieces recall the pure technique of master  draftsmen throughout time, including Hans Holbein (Dutch,  Sixteenth Century), Leonardo da Vinci (Italian, 1452-1519) and  Hilaire-Germain-Edgar Degas (French, 1834-1917). Like these  masters, Borremans’s drawings often deal with the serial, with  one element considered and reconsidered within one drawing. The  precision of his work recalls the Flemish portraitists. Squarely  grounded in the tradition of unimaginably beautiful technique, Mr  Borremans departs from the age-old masters in genre. His images  are of a world that is both dark and compelling.   He uses conflicting elements of scale, juxtapositions of  disparate elements and repetitive use of cryptic motifs to engage  the viewer. With the use of “marginalia” or seemingly unconnected  imagery dissolving on the edges of many of the paintings, the  viewer is also given the sense that they are party to a private,  arcane world, only heightening the viewer’s compulsion to view  the images.   The fully illustrated 120-page exhibition catalog Michaël  Borremans: Tekeningen/Zeichnungen/Drawings will be available  at the museum for $38.   There will be a free public reception on Friday, May 20, 8 to  10:30 pm, in the exhibition and a free public lecture on  Saturday, May 21, at 2 pm.   The CMA is at 11150 East Boulevard. For information,  216-421-7340.
 
    



 
						