Monday, February 27, 2012
  • One of MONA's above-ground museum buildings, seen from the site's harbour
    Photo by Derek Henderson, 2011

  • "Engpass," 2011, by Roman Signer
    MONA, Tasmania
    Photo by Derek Henderson, 2011

  • "Cement Truck," 2007, by Wim Delvoye
    MONA, Tasmania
    Photo by Derek Henderson, 2011

  • View of the MONA site from across the River Derwent
    Photo by Derek Henderson, 2011

  • Subterranean exhibition spaces at MONA
    Photo by Derek Henderson, 2011

  • Wim Delvoye exhibition, MONA, Tasmania
    Photo by Derek Henderson, 2011

  • Wim Delvoye, Double Möbius Quad Corpus, 2010, MONA, Tasmania, 2011
    Photo by Derek Henderson

  • One room of the Wim Delvoye exhibition, featuring a number of the works recreating human digestive processes
    MONA, Tasmania
    Photo by Derek Henderson, 2011

  • View of Roy Pavillion, one of the boutique accommodations at the MONA site
    MONA, Tasmania
    Photo by Derek Henderson, 2011

Monday, February 27, 2012 Replay
David Walsh's MONA
The Eccentric Collector's Tasmanian Museum Hosts Controversial Belgian Artist Wim Delvoye
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David Walsh's MONA

The Eccentric Collector's Tasmanian Museum Hosts Controversial Belgian Artist Wim Delvoye

The uniquely curated collection of contemporary art and ancient antiquities at the Museum of Old and New Art (MONA) in Hobart, Tasmania, is explored by New Zealand-based photographer Derek Henderson. Conceived by mathematician turned professional gambler David Walsh, MONA is currently hosting the largest retrospective to date of Belgian conceptual artist Wim Delvoye, featuring 80 works including his tattooed pig skins, abstracted precious metal crucifixes and a series of branded machines that reproduce the digestive process. Presenting contemporary works by Tracey Emin, Damien Hirst, Anselm Kiefer, Santiago Sierra and Gelitin alongside Egyptian artifacts, burial tombs, ancient fertility icons and jewelry, MONA’s permanent collection mirrors Walsh's fascination with sex, death, decadence and decay. Much more than a simple art gallery, the institution features eight bespoke pavilions providing boutique accommodation positioned on a rocky outcrop shadowing the Derwent River, a wine cellar containing produce from Walsh’s onsite vineyard, a microbrewery, and an infinity pool with stunning panoramic views. “I do not have the technical capability to write a book that does these ideas justice,” explains Walsh. “I can, however, construct an environment that explores philosophies tangential to the artistic experience. In a way, it's my megaphone.”

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