Mara Jenny
Landschaftsmalerei
Exhibition view. Landschaftsmalerei at Janitor Brussels. ©Fabrice Schneider
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Exhibition view. Landschaftsmalerei at Janitor Brussels. ©Fabrice Schneider
Exhibition view. Landschaftsmalerei at Janitor Brussels. ©Fabrice Schneider
Bags, Mara Jenny, 2026. Bags, some of them painted, house facades, all painted, various dimensions. ©Fabrice Schneider
Bags, Mara Jenny, 2026. Bags, some of them painted, house facades, all painted, various dimensions. ©Fabrice Schneider
Bags, Mara Jenny, 2026. Bags, some of them painted, house facades, all painted, various dimensions. ©Fabrice Schneider
Bags, Mara Jenny, 2026. Bags, some of them painted, house facades, all painted, various dimensions. ©Fabrice Schneider
Bags (detail), Mara Jenny, 2026. ©Fabrice Schneider
Walls, Mara Jenny, 2026. Walls build out of parts of other used walls, adjusted to the height of the room, variable lenghts. ©Fabrice Schneider
Landscape, Mara Jenny, 2026. Colored pencil on paper, artist frame, 25 x 47 cm (framed). ©Fabrice Schneider
Landscape 2, Mara Jenny, 2026. Laser print, paper, colored pencil, tape, artist frame 35 x 47 cm (framed). ©Fabrice Schneider
Room, Mara Jenny, 2026. Colored pencil on paper, artist frame, 34,5 x 24,2 cm (framed). ©Fabrice Schneider
Landscape 3, Mara Jenny, 2026. Laser print, paper, tape, artist frame, 35 x 21,8 cm (framed). ©Fabrice Schneider
Posters (Boxes, flipped), Mara Jenny, 2026. Edition of 100 folded posters each 42 x 29,7 cm. ©Fabrice Schneider
The title of this exhibition, Landscape Painting, is more apt that one
might think. Landscape art is really about one’s stretching into space
and this is what Mara seems to be doing here. To clarify, let’s start
with what the canonical landscape painter Cèzanne writes: “The landsca-
pe thinks itself in me and I am its consciousness.” So pompous that Amy
Sillman has to put it more carnal: “When Cèzanne went to paint Montagne
Sainte-Victoire, he went out to have a relationship with a mountain, to
practically lick it with his eyeballs.” This is accurate and fun but it
is also generic: the fact that art is subjective and a very personal en-
terprise isn’t one of the many uncertain facts about art.
In this exhibition, there is a collection of things the artist has stret-
ched to reach out to, like in the idea of a landscape described above.
There are added walls that shift the room’s volumes, houses in bags, a
picture of architecture models, and interiors found in various places
turned into fragmented drawings. A lazy argument is to say that the ex-
hibition is a subjective take on architecture. It is a landscape of the
built environment seen through the eye of the artist, like what Cèzanne
believed he was doing with his favorite mountain. But this proposition
is closer to a truism than anything else. It is of course true, but what
then?
Let’s go further and ask what exactly is the subjective state of an ar-
tist stretching out to things, making landscapes. Let’s ask how that sub-
jective state might have changed from one day to another, from one month
to another, from a season to another, year to year, feeling to feeling.
Personal views change. Nothing is really one and this philosophical point
is key to the show. While trying to pin down ideas, Mara and I spoke ab-
out impression; impression over description, uncertainty over meaning,
the distance from a well rounded aboutness our brains would otherwise
tend to. It went further than mere subjectivity and steered toward a flo-
wing impression of change.
What brings everything together for me in Landscape Painting is to ack-
nowledge the incoherence that is typical of impressions, finding incoher-
ence beautiful even, without using psychedelics tricks and the pleasures
of surrealistic absurdism (This is achieved through formal austerity and
repetition in the presentation; think of the repeating narrow line of
the drawings which resembles the urban canyons in bags and narrow side
of the walls). There is a fruitful antiscientific and antirational propo-
sal being put forward, asking the viewer to peer down into a carrier bag
and see buildings, which they might be recognized again on the works on
paper, and lost again in the walls made out of other walls. There is a
structure to this exhibition, possibly like the composition of a landsca-
pe painting, which eventually represents nothing, yet it is rescued from
emptiness.
1 Joachim Gasquet, “Cézanne: a Memoir with Conversations” (1921; 1991)
2 Amy Sillman, “Selected Writings and Drawings” (2018; 2022)
Piero Bisello