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Photo © Tate (Matt Greenwood)

Joseph Beuys and Vlassis Caniaris

12 rooms in Artist and Society

  • Betye Saar and Firelei Baez
  • A view from São Paulo: Abstraction and Society
  • Civil War
  • Nation Building Between Heaven And Earth
  • Wael Shawky
  • Naufus Ramírez-Figueroa
  • Joseph Beuys and Vlassis Caniaris
  • Tourmaline
  • Deana Lawson
  • Farah Al Qasimi
  • Witnesses
  • Joseph Koudelka

These artists used found objects to make sculptures that demonstrate the political potential of art

Joseph Beuys (1921–1986) and Vlassis Caniaris (1928–2011) took a similar experimental approach when creating installations during the 1970s and 1980s. The artists worked against a backdrop of nationalism in their native countries. For Beuys, it was Germany after the Second World War. For Caniaris, the Greek Civil War and military junta that followed.

As a migrant in Rome, Caniaris encountered ‘arte povera’ – a radical Italian art movement that began in the late 1960s and involved unconventional processes and ‘everyday’ materials. Meanwhile, it was the 1960s Fluxus movement that influenced Beuys. He became part of an international collective of artists, musicians, writers, and performers that rejected traditional artistic conventions and embraced a wide range of mediums.

Beuys saw art as a form of social engagement and activism to address political and environmental issues. He made what he called ‘social sculptures’ – artworks that seek to transform society by inviting everyone to be part of the creative process.

Caniaris used plaster, paper and wire mesh to craft pieces he called ‘almost sculptures.’ A former set designer, his theatrical installations feature everyday items: newspapers, clothing (often his own and his family’s), suitcases and toys. Caniaris altered the objects depending on the availability of materials. The changing composition symbolised migrants adapting to their new environment.

The vulnerability of Caniaris’s mixed-media installations contrasts with the stark bronze and aluminium work by Beuys. Through their distinctive individual practices and use of unconventional materials, Caniaris and Beuys show that art can blend with the objects, politics and emotions of everyday life.

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Tate Modern
Natalie Bell Building Level 2 West
Room 8

Getting Here

Ongoing

Free

Vlassis Caniaris, Untitled  1974

Untitled considers the moment of arrival of migrants to unfamiliar lands and the ways in which they are greeted and regarded in the countries they reach. Caniaris often made life-size dolls with wood, wire and plaster. Symbolically, he would dress them in his own and his family’s clothing. This standing faceless figure of a half-body is given presence by the trousers and shoes it wears. Caniaris lived in a number of European artistic centres – Rome, Paris and Berlin. A temporary immigrant himself, he was sensitive to the growing global crisis concerning migrants.

Gallery label, September 2024

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artworks in Joseph Beuys and Vlassis Caniaris

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Vlassis Caniaris, Image  1971

Here, Caniaris recreates a migrant’s environment: newspapers, addressing current affairs, are used as a floor covering, and packing cases are chairs. The suitcases can be read as symbolising not just the migrants’ living conditions, but the migrants themselves and their personal histories. Caniaris made Image after encountering the work of artists associated with nouveau réalisme in Paris (who incorporated real objects directly into their work). From the early 1970s, the artist focused on creating 3D installations that explored matters of national identity, social inequality, migration and displacement.

Gallery label, September 2024

2/4
artworks in Joseph Beuys and Vlassis Caniaris

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Joseph Beuys, Lightning with Stag in its Glare  1958–85

This work enacts a dramatic moment in nature: a bolt of lightning, represented as a large bronze mound, strikes the ground, illuminating a stag. The pile of clay represents the earth’s natural energies. The stag is depicted as an ironing board balanced on logs and cast in shiny aluminium. Beuys uses symbols to create a scene of impending ecological disaster. In German mythology, stags symbolise guidance and protection during difficult times.

Gallery label, September 2024

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artworks in Joseph Beuys and Vlassis Caniaris

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Vlassis Caniaris, Possible Background  1974

This installation represents displacement, shedding light on the lives of ‘guest workers’. These were migrants who journeyed from southern to western Europe through transnational agreements intended to address labour shortages after the Second World War. Caniaris was displaced from Greece, only returning in 1976, two years after the fall of the Greek military junta. This installation was first shown in the same year, as part of the exhibition Immigrants at the Institute of Contemporary Art, London.

Gallery label, September 2024

4/4
artworks in Joseph Beuys and Vlassis Caniaris

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Art in this room

T13027: Untitled
Vlassis Caniaris Untitled 1974
T13269: Image
Vlassis Caniaris Image 1971

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Joseph Beuys Lightning with Stag in its Glare 1958–85
T16173: Possible Background
Vlassis Caniaris Possible Background 1974
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