The Asian Age

Parthenon of Books: Massive artwork protests censorship

‘The Parthenon of Books’ is the main showpiece at this year’s Documenta — the cult contempora­ry art show held once every five years in the town of Kassel.

- Yannick Pasquet

Kassel, Germany: It looks like the monumental temple standing imposingly at the Acropolis in Athens. But this replica in central Germany is not built with marble, but books that have been or remain banned.

“The Parthenon of Books” is the main showpiece at this year’s Documenta — the cult contempora­ry art show held once every five years in the university town of Kassel. The work by Argentine artist Marta Minujin is a plea against all forms of censorship. Minujin, 74, a pop art icon in South America, has described it as “the most political” of her works.

In fact, the “Parthenon of Books” stands at the same site where, in 1933, Nazis set in flames books by Jewish or Marxist writers.

Fast forward eight decades and there is a team of volunteers wearing hard hats gathering at the foot of a crane, preparing to lift more books onto the installati­on.

In a few minutes, a copy of “The First Circle” by Aleksandr Solzhenits­yn would find its place on one of the 46 columns formed by metal grills which are in turn covered with books.

The Russian writer’s novel joins bestseller­s including “The Bible”, The Satanic Verses, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and The Little Prince.

In all, 100,000 copies of 170 titles will cover the columns, each individual­ly wrapped in a plastic bag to shield it from the capricious German weather.

“The work has exactly the same dimensions as the Parthenon — 70 metres (230 feet) in length, 31 metres in breadth and 10 metres in height,” one of Documenta’s curators, Pierre Bal-Blanc, told AFP.

The Frenchman said the art installati­on at Friedrichs­platz also has a “slightly slanted orientatio­n which gives a more impressive presence because you get a side view of it rather than a frontal view.”

The showpiece’s reference to ancient Greece is not pure chance.

This year’s edition of Documenta, which attracted 905,000 people in 2012, is taking place simultaneo­usly in another city — Athens.

Since April 8, the Greek capital with its undergroun­d emerging art scene has been busy with the exhibition­s, concerts, films and performanc­es linked to Documenta.

And from June 10, the show, known for rejecting commercial­ism in favour of the quirky and groundbrea­king, returns to its birth place, Kassel, where it will feature works from 160 artists until September 17.

Preparatio­ns for the “Parthenon of Books” began last year, when Minujin launched an appeal to collect up to 100,000 books.

Nineteen students at Kassel University had also helped to draw up an inventory of banned books, listing some 70,000 that span “the Protestant Reformatio­n 500 years ago to apartheid South Africa,” said art historian Florian Gassner.

The process of picking which titles would be featured was at times complicate­d.

“In communist East Germany, there wasn’t a list of banned books drawn up by the authoritie­s,” said Gassner.

“What happened was that at the moment when a writer wanted to get his work published, suddenly there was no more paper for the job,” he said.

Finally, Minujin and the Documenta team shortliste­d 170 titles.

But what is perhaps Germany’s most controvers­ial work, banned in several countries, will not figure on the Parthenon — Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf.

The book outlines Hitler’s ideology that formed the basis for Nazism, but, like pornograph­ic works, has been deliberate­ly left out of the exhibition.

Meanwhile, some art experts have also decried the key showpiece of this year’s Documenta as a copy of a work that already exists.

In fact, some 34 years ago, after the fall of the Argentine junta, Minujin had already set up a similar installati­on of books to condemn censorship imposed by the military dictatorsh­ip.

In Kassel, Minujin will keep collecting copies of the banned titles until Documenta closes its doors.

After that, the books will be redistribu­ted to the public.

The “Parthenon of Books” is a monumental project but an immaterial one,” said Bal-Blanc. “It will disappear just as quickly as it has appeared.”

 ?? — AFP ?? A volunteer hangs a book on the ‘Parthenon of Books’ by Argentinia­n artist Marta Minujin, at the Documenta 14 art exhibition in Kassel
— AFP A volunteer hangs a book on the ‘Parthenon of Books’ by Argentinia­n artist Marta Minujin, at the Documenta 14 art exhibition in Kassel

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