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For the ZERO avant-garde, traditional conceptions of art could be challenged through transforming the atelier into an exhibition space and disseminating their art through books. In this manner they made friends with the representatives of Concrete Poetry. A diagram visualizes who they thought to be part of the movement: those who were open to experimentation and those were not afraid to work with fire; even in the galleries, few of which were willing to pay homage to the avant-garde at this time. International thinking united the young artists of the 1950s and 60s, whose network extended from Düsseldorf to Milan, Brussels, Paris, and Zagreb. Kinetics and light replaced brushes and canvases, and new music played in the background. They also tried to get closer to nature through the concept of the Open Artwork.In The ABCs of ZERO, writers, scholars, and authors from the fields of art, music, sociology and theater tell the story of this art movement-from A for atelier to Z for ZERO. Featuring a wealth of photos and documents from an era just emerging from the ruins, but facing the future with optimism, this book recalls a historical moment of peaceful utopia in Europe.
Ob in bildender Kunst, Literatur, Kino, Wissenschaft oder Mode - in den Krisen nach dem Ersten Weltkrieg beruhte die Faszination für Typen auf einem gesamtgesellschaftlichen Impuls. Man suchte neue Vorbilder und ganz unbescheiden das »Gesicht der Zeit«, wie uns die neusachlichen Bildnisse von Otto Dix, George Grosz, Jeanne Mammen und Hanna Nagel zeigen. Viele der klischeebehafteten Vorstellungen, etwa zur »Neuen Frau« oder zum »Arbeiter«, wirken bis in die Gegenwart, indem sie uns mit ihrer Klassifikation von Individuen an ein Dilemma erinnern, das auch in heutigen Rassismen fortlebt.Das weite Spektrum der Beiträge aus kunst- wie medizinhistorischer, aus medienwissenschaftlicher und soziologischer Sicht belegt dies eindrucksvoll. Eine eigens für die Ausstellungen entwickelte Installation der 1990 geborenen Künstlerin Cemile Sahin schlägt eine Brücke in die Gegenwart.MIT WERKEN VON:Hans Baluschek, Rudolf Bergander, Albert Birkle, Richard Birnstengel, Friedrich Bochmann, Steffi Brandl, Gottfried Brockmann, Friedrich Busack, Heinrich Maria Davringhausen, Erich Drechsler, Kate Diehn-Bitt, Rudolf Dischinger, Otto Dix, Hermann Fechenbach, Conrad Felixmüller, Fred Goldberg, Otto Griebel, George Grosz, Lea Grundig, Hans Grundig, Elsa Haensgen-Dingkuhn, Hainz Hamisch, Nini Hess, Olga Hayduk, Karl Hubbuch, Heinrich Hoerle, Lotte Jacobi, Grethe Jürgens, Alexander Kanoldt, Annelise Kretschmer, Paula Lauenstein, Lotte Lesehr-Schneider, Elfriede Lohse-Wächtler, Jeanne Mammen, Hanna Nagel, Gerta Overbeck-Schenck, Lotte B. Prechner, Anton Räderscheidt, Kurt Querner, Christian Schad, August Sander, Josef Scharl, Rudolf Schlichter, Wilhelm Schnarrenberger, Georg Scholz, Alice Sommer, Cami Stone, Erika Streit, Ernst Thoms, Kurt Weinhold, Erik Winnertz, Dörte Clara Wolff [DODO], Richard Ziegler und Cemile Sahin
Der legendäre Trompeter Louis Armstrong tourte 1965, nur vier Jahre nach dem Bau der Berliner Mauer, als erster US-amerikanischer Musiker durch die DDR, während in den USA um Bürgerrechte für Schwarze gerungen wurde. Armstrong vermied während seiner Reise politische Meinungsäußerungen, spielte aber bei jedem Auftritt What Did I Do To Be So Black And Blue, eine Komposition, die er zuvor jahrelang nicht aufgeführt hatte.DAS MINSK Kunsthaus in Potsdam macht dieses historische Ereignis zum Ausgangspunkt für eine Auseinandersetzung mit der Ambivalenz dieser offiziellen Tour vor dem Hintergrund der Bürgerrechtsbewegung, des Vietnamkriegs und des Eisernen Vorhangs. Gemälde, Fotografien, Archivmaterial und Installationen von Terry Adkins, Louis Armstrong, Pina Bausch, Peter Brötzmann, Darol Olu Kae, Volkhard Kühl, Glenn Ligon, Gordon Parks, Adrian Piper, Evelyn Richter, Lorna Simpson, Willi Sitte, Andy Warhol, Ruth Wolf-Rehfeldt und anderen zeigen vielfältige Perspektiven auf die Rolle der Kunst im Spannungsfeld zwischen den politischen Systemen und der Beziehung von Jazzmusik und Rassismus. LOUIS ARMSTRONG (1901-1971) gab 1965 17 Konzerte an acht Tagen in Berlin, Leipzig, Magdeburg und Erfurt. Fast 60.000 Menschen kamen zu den Konzerten mit seiner All-Star-Band.
Idris Khan is internationally recognized for a densely-layered, poetic body of work imbued with echoes and reverberations that evoke the flow of time. Drawing inspiration from culturally coded sources and artifacts, Khan explores themes including history, religion, music and cumulative experience. Repetition and ritual are central to Khan's approach to image-making and have remained a throughline in his practice. Spanning painting, photographic prints, watercolors, works on paper, sculpture, and video, Khan condenses human experience into imagesthat encapsulate the metaphysical collapse of time into singular moments. Idris Khan: Repeat After Me chronicles the development of the British artist's practice across more than two decades, from his early monochromatic photographic works to a new series of abstract watercolor compositions that encapsulate the essence of iconic paintings of the 16th-18th centuries through their use of color. Accompanying his first US exhibition, this catalogue will feature essays by curatorMarcelle Polednik, art critic David Carrier and a conversation between Idris Khan and artist Edmund de Waal.London-based IDRIS KHAN (*1978, Birmingham) is one of the most exciting British artists of his generation. Upon completing his Master's Degree in Fine Art at the Royal College of Art in London in 2004, he first garnered international attention for his digital layering of black-and-white photographs. In 2018, he created the British Museum's first site-specific work, he has had numerous international solo exhibitions, and in 2017 was awarded the American Architecture Prize for his design of Abu Dhabi's Wahat Al Karama.
Approximately 50,000 Jews survived the Holocaust inoccupied Poland and Ukraine, some of them using hideouts.Driven by necessity, they were forced to seek refugein unlikely and seemingly unsuited places such as treehollows, closets, basements or sewers-staying there fordays, and sometimes even years. They are a testament tothe architectural creativity of those who had to secure thebasic means of sustaining life with minimal resources,without being able to radically alter the space availableto them.Architect, scholar and artist Natalia Romik has identifiedand studied several hideouts that still exist today.Her research, resulting in the exhibition Hideouts. TheArchitecture of Survival, accentuates the material and spatialdimensions of living in hiding, gathering the evidenceof vernacular, architectural creativity employed underlife-threatening conditions. This interdisciplinary catalogue,addresses the fundamental question of the functionof architecture in relation to the history of violenceand our culture of commemoration.A graduate in political science, practitioner of architecture and artist, NATALIA ROMIK (*1983, Warsaw) received a PhD at London's Bartlett School of Architecture in 2018. Romik has been awarded numerous grants, including the London Arts and Humanities Partnership, and the Scholarship of the Minister of Culture and National Heritage of Poland. Currently she is a postdoctoral fellow at the Foundation for the Memory of the Shoah in Paris.
Die Publikation Rheingold. Zeichnungen bildet erstmals alle Zeichnungen zu Alex Wissels Werkgruppe Rheingold ab. Rheingold entstand aus der Figur des Art Consultant Helge Achenbach, welcher 2015 wegen Betrugs verurteilt wurde. Laut Begründung der Richter hatte der Kunstberater sich durch die Manipulation von Rechnungen des Betruges schuldig gemacht. In den absurdesten Momenten des Prozesses bezeichnete Achenbach die gefälschten Rechnungen als Collage und sich selbst damit quasi als Künstler.Die Zeichnungen nehmen diesen Moment des Prozesses zum Anlass um über die Genese von neoliberaler Realität in Deutschland nachzudenken. Sie können als alternative (Kunst-)geschichtsschreibung der letzten 25 Jahre Bundesrepublik gelesen werden. Die zentrale Frage: Wie wurde aus dem Beuys-Diktum: "Jeder Mensch ist ein Künstler" die Ich-AG? ALEX WISSEL (*1983, Aschaffenburg, Deutschland) ist bildender Künstler. Wissels Werkansatz zeichnet sich durch die Wahl verschiedenster Medien wie Zeichnung, Film und Installation und der Arbeit als Drehbuchautor, Bühnenbildner und Schauspieler aus. Wissels Arbeiten wurden u.a. im Kunstverein Harburger Bahnhof, Volksbühne Berlin, dem Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen präsentiert.
Skin in the Game follows on from the acclaimed fieldworkdiary, The Metabolic Museum. In this new book,Clémentine Deliss expands on how artists understand riskand contention both in their work and with regard to historicalcollections. Through a series of compelling conversations,questions are raised on how to work on colonialcollections through the concept of the "prototype" as generativeof a multiplicity of non-exclusive interpretations. Thebook includes interviews with leading women artists spanningtwo generations-Ruth Buchanan, Otobong Nkanga,Collier Schorr, Joëlle Tuerlinckx, and Andrea Zittel-inwhich they discuss that moment of "skin in the game,"when each of them took the decision to become an artist,to enter the Hades of an uncertain existence and theHeaven of aesthetic experiment. What was the prototypethat defined their career and their life's trajectory, that likea revenant returns over the course of an artist's lifetime?CLÉMENTINE DELISS (*1960, London) is an independent curator whose practice crosses the borders of contemporary art, critical anthropology and curatorial experimentation. She is internationally recognized for her seminal work on the Post-Ethnographic, on African modernism, and for her interventionist practices in art. She is Honorary Global Humanities Professor of History of Art at the University of Cambridge, and Associate Curator at KW Institute for Contemporary Art in Berlin.
For centuries, what lies above the Arctic Circle has been a source of intrigue for those who live below its border. Stories from the ancient Greeks mixed with Norse mythology and reports from early voyages have given rise to lively conceptions of ice-free waters and a fabled people who lived at the top of the world. Expeditions to the Arctic in search of resources and trade routes slowly replaced these legends with more accurate information. Yet even these narrative accounts were filled with details of a foreign world that excited the imagination. Accompanying illustrations seemed to promise verisimilitude, giving shape to the incredible. Drawing on the rich collections of The New York Public Library, this lavishly illustrated catalogue is a large survey of how the Arctic has been visually depicted, defined, and imagined over the past 500 years, and invites us to consider how this history has shaped our current understanding of the polar North and the peoples for whom it is home. The presentation ranges from 16th-century explorers who attempted to capture the perceived strangeness of a remote region to contemporary artists whose workconveys the human impact on its changing climate and vulnerable landscape.
¿ Polymath and fascinating personality of the twentieth century¿ Inspiration for artists of all disciplines up until today¿ Presentation of his innovative paintings and sculptures
Erased de Kooning Drawing is an artwork that radically challenged the very definition of art and questioned the notion of the artist as creator. Three American artists were involved in its creation: In 1953, Robert Rauschenberg erased a drawing by Willem de Kooning, who had somewhat reluctantly been giving his consent. Jasper Johns created a label for its first public presentation that proved to be key to the psychological framing of the piece. Having been transmuted into something new, the obliterated drawing was soon perceived as a pivotal moment in art history: In the 1950s it was considered Neo-Dada, in the 1960s it was hailed as the beginning of conceptual art, and in the 1980s saw it as a departure into postmodernism. Numerous artists referenced the work and it became a touchstone in Rauschenberg's oeuvre. Gregor Stemmrich outlines its status as a litmus test for the definitions of modernism, literalism and postmodernism, and demonstrates its continuing relevance for the theory of the image and the question of appropriation.GREGOR STEMMRICH (*1953, Soest) is Professor of Art and Art History at NYU Abu Dhabi since 2015. His main focus is on modern and contemporary art. Previously, he was Professor at Freie Universität Berlin and Hochschule für Bildende Künste Dresden. He edited the interviews and writings of Lawrence Weiner as well as Dan Graham, and has published extensively on abstract, conceptual and minimal art.
Complementing Gerhard Richter's hitherto six-volume Catalogue Raisonné, published between 2011 and 2022, this concluding seventh double volume will be published. Catalogue 7a encompasses all the works that make up the German artist's remarkably complex oeuvre that have been featured in the previous six volumes-reproduced at a scale of 1:50. The catalogue thus provides a unique overview of the artist's entire oeuvre, tracing its development as well as Richter's shifts between different styles. The appendix also lists amendments and important corrections to the catalogue of works. In addition, Richter's new works since the completion of Volume 6 in 2019 will be published here. Volume 7b contains an extensive biography as well as detailed information on exhibitions and a bibliography, supplemented by numerous illustrations.GERHARD RICHTER (*1932) is one of the most influential artists of our time. Over the course of six decades, a stylistically diverse oeuvre, characterized by a wealth of motifs and a uniquely original quality has emerged. Richter studied from 1961-1964 at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, where he later taught as a professor. He lives and works in Cologne.DIETMAR ELGER (*1958, Hannover) has been director of the Gerhard Richter Archive at the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden since 2006.
After the success of Coincidences at Museums, Austrian photographer Stefan Draschan has continued to work on his various photographic series¿and time and time again he has succeeded in finding eye-catching moments. It is therefore high time for a new book that presents his staged series for the first time, shows a selction from the previously unpublished series Cars Matching Homes, and above all presents new highlights from his museum series, which have become increasingly diverse. Draschan's work has inspired a wide audience to identify patterns and joyful compositions in everyday life. This beautifully designed book shows just how many visual surprises and unusual perspectives this master of the unex- pected moment has to offer.
CARRIE MAE WEEMS (*1953, Portland, Oregon) was trained as both a dancer and a photographer before enrolling in the graduate program in folklore at University of California, Berkeley in 1984. Questioning the representation of the Black subject, she came to prominence through her photographic work such as her seminal The Kitchen Table Series (1990), a narrative of staged photographs that tell a story of one woman's life, as conducted in the intimate setting of her kitchen. In 2014, she was the first African-American woman ever given a solo exhibition at the Guggenheim in New York.
In 2019, Berlin-based contemporary artist Stefan Marx created a series of drawings for a daily column in The New York Times. Now, he has turned his Reading the News series into quite a unique board book. Whether you think of it as an artist's book, a coloring book, or an inspiring children's book, it opens up unusual spaces for our imaginations. With just a few concise lines, Stefan Marx cheerful fruit and veg will change your frame of mind about reading the news.Over the past 20 years, contemporary artist, skateboarder and illustrator STEFAN MARX (*1979 Schwalmstadt, Germany) has lent his unique handwriting to a variety of media: paper, canvas, porcelain and textiles. He publishes artists' books and zines, designs record covers for various labels, and shows his work in international exhibitions, at art book fairs and galleries. Marx lives and works in Berlin.
Till Now provides an overview of the work to date of theyoung German-French artist Milen Till, whose multi-layeredworks explore the legacy of conceptual art as wellas the ready-made. His playful reinterpretations of masterpiecesby Marcel Duchamp, Joseph Beuys, Yves Klein,Sol Le Witt, Bruce Nauman, and many others make him ahumorous archaeologist of contemporary art. He takes uptheir methods and works, alienates them, contextualizesthem, rendering them an entirely new meaning. Using awide variety of methods, means, and tools¿from foldingrulers to drums and darts¿he takes components of arthistory and the art world's sacrosanct to develop entirelyoriginal works with a tongue-in-cheek lightness.MILEN TILL (*1984, Munich) was one part of the legendary DJ duo Kill The Tills together with his brother Amédée before turning to visual arts in 2016. He graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich in 2020, and has participated in numerous international solo and group exhibitions. Till lives and works in Munich.
Otti Berger created fabrics that fundamentally changed the understanding of what textiles could be and do. A core member of the experimental approach to textiles at the Bauhaus, she also was a female entrepreneur in the frenzied time that was the early 1930s in Berlin. Working closely with architects of the New Objectivity movement such as Lilly Reich, Ludwig Hilberseimer and Hans Scharoun, she designed upholstery and wall tapestries, curtains and floor coverings that responded to novel types of use and production methods, and thereby redefined the relationship between aesthetics and function¿with fascinating results. To date Berger's textile work has only been explored in fragments. This book is the first comprehensive study of its complexity and beauty and makes her hitherto unpublished treatise on fabrics and the methodology of textile production accessible. By systematically arranging the fabrics according to their application, Raum's research offers an entirely new perspective on Berger's oeuvre that emphasizes the craftsmanship and entrepreneurial side of her work, and appreciates the largely unrecognized significance of textiles in the history of architecture and design. OTTI BERGER (1898 - 1944) was one of the most important textile designers of the 20th century. Born in Zmajevac, in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, present-day Croatia, she studied in Zagreb from 1921 - 1926 and at the Bauhaus in Dessau from 1927. Leaving her teaching post at the Bauhaus, she set up her own business in Berlin in 1932 to design fabrics for modern interiors throughout Europe. In 1936, she was banned from working due to her Jewish heritage. Attempts to escape to England and the USA failed. She was deported from Croatia to Auschwitz and was murdered there in 1944. Visual artist and art historian JUDITH RAUM (*1977) has been preoccupied for several years with the Bauhaus textile workshop. Her intensive research in European and North American archives in cooperation with the Bauhaus Archive Berlin, is the first comprehensive study of Berger's scattered estate.
Black Masculinities explores the broad spectrum and diversity of Black masculinities through the medium of contemporary photography. Seen through the lenses of 22 Black (or) People of Color (BPoC) from around the world, the stereotypic entanglement of Black identity and masculinity is deconstructed and charged with a new set of values. Embedded in a long history of slavery, racism and oppression, the topos of Black masculinity continues to be subtly represented as aggressive, hypersexual and violent to this day. This richly illustrated book breaks down and visualizes the common mechanisms of representation in visual culture through carefully edited images and a textual contextualization. It acts as an introductory index and platform for BPoC photographers, who have been underrepresented at all levels of art production since the beginnings of photography, and makes their work visible. For all of us.FEATURED PHOTOGRAPHERS: Kemka Ajoku, Kwaku Alston, Namafu Amutse, Eric Asamoah, Nuits Balnéaires, Arielle Bobb-Willis, Braylen Dion, Kofi Duah, Yannis Davy Guibinga, Jabari Jacobs, Kelvin Konadu, Jude Lartey, Naomi Mukadi, Maganga Mwagogo, Lakin Ogunbanwo, Ruby Okoro, Rogers Ouma, Micha Serraf, Ngadi Smart, Isaac West, Jozef Wright, Ussi'n YalaJOSHUA AMISSAH (*1995, Switzerland) studied fine arts, photography, and design at the Zurich University of the Arts. He works as a designer, (photo)editor, art educator and curator at the intersection of image and text. From 2019 - 2022 he was co-curator of photoSCHWEIZ and was the main curator of the Black Art Matters exhibition in this role in 2020. He lives and works between Berlin and Zurich.
It was the pioneering spirit in American Paper Art that sparked Therese Weber's interest in the material far beyond its conventional use. As an artist and researcher, she has since devoted herself to the medium and its cultural history, translating the process of paper pouring and dipping into an individual language of images and form. From paper creations using paper fiber and pulp painting, to research into prehistoric rock carvings and site-specific installations and performative actions in remote desert and mountain regions, Therese Weber's artistic practice displays a methodological diversity. Her research trips and prolonged stays in Japan, China and Central Asia were decisive for the artist's concepts. This book presents the focal points of her work, but also shows how the artist interweaves different media and themes. Exploring the spatial context between center and periphery, the notion of borders and border crossings is at the heart of her visual vocabulary and charecterizes her artistic language.THERESE WEBER (*1953 Switzerland) is one of the most important protagonists of Paper Art. The Swiss artist weaves photography, drawing, object and performative actions into an innovative visual language. Expeditions to the Far East and to Central and Southeast Asia have shaped her artistic research focus over the past thirty years.
Coupling defeat and despair with rebellious humor, Danish artist Peter Linde Busk explores the grotesque conditions of human existence. Populating his works with tragic and awkward figures like fallen heroes, jesters, or outlaws in abstract spaces of detailed ornamentation, his figurations are meticulously composed using a great variety of textures and techniques, and often incorporate random material relics from previous works. Similarly, his titles are wry quotes or poetic fragments: it is from Rilke that Peter Linde Busk has borrowed the title of the book, Who speaks of victory? To endure is all. This richly illustrated monograph features a major essay by art historian Maria Fabricius Hansen juxtaposing Linde Busk's work with medieval mosaics and the grotesques of Renaissance art. A catalogue raisonné of works from 2015 to 2022 is supplemented by short prose texts and a playlist by writer Minna Grooss that suggests a sound track to the materially emphatic works by Linde Busk.PETER LINDE BUSK (*1973, Copenhagen) is one of the most renowned Danish artists of his generation. Educated in London, New York and Düsseldorf and working in multiple media such as painting, sculpture, relief, and mosaic, a central theme of his work is seeing the beauty and value in what is normally considered failed. This is evident both in his motifs and in his choice of materials such as discarded matter or studio debris. Linde Busk lives and works in Berlin.
Influenced by her experiences of war and migration, Simone Fattal has transcended the boundaries of both media and geography like few other artists of her generation. In her collages, she combines pieces from her private archive with historical events in the Arab world. Made up of individual parts and reassembled, these works suggest the fragility of an identity shaped by migration. Her more abstract ceramic sculptures reference ancient myths and archaeological finds. Fattal's first solo exhibition in Germany is accompanied by the artist's first comprehensive monograph, which combines essays by long-time companions with new scholarly contributions by international authors.SIMONE FATTAL (*1942, Damascus) was born in Syria and raised in Lebanon. She studied philosophy at the École des Lettres in Beirut and at the Sorbonne in Paris, before returning to Beirut and starting to paint in 1969. Fleeing the Civil War in 1980, she settled in California. Fattal currently lives in Paris, and she has had recent exhibitions at the Whitechapel Gallery, London, Bergen Konsthall, MoMA PS1, New York and the Musée Yves Saint Laurent, Marrakech.
Numerous publications and exhibitions have examined Jean-Michel Basquiat's extensive oeuvre that consists of more than 3000 works. This catalogue, however, focuses on eight paintings: In the summer of 1982, Basquiat traveled to Modena, Italy, for one of his first solo exhibitions in Europe at the gallery of Emilio Mazzoli. Within just a few days, he painted a group of large-format paintings that surpassed his previous work not only in terms of their scale. Each at least two by four meters in size, they mark his transition from graffiti spraying in the streets of Manhattan to painting on canvas. At the same time, they reflect an artist coming into his own. The paintings¿including masterpieces that today are considered pivotal and among the most outstanding of his oeuvre¿have never been shown together. This catalogue revisits this crucial moment of Basquiat's career some 40 years ago and reunites them for the first time.JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT (1960-1988, New York) is one of the most important artists of the 20th century. Emerging from the underground post-punk scene in Lower Manhattan, he attracted the attention of the art world in 1981 with the legendary group exhibition New York/New Wave. In nine prolific years, he created an oeuvre that formulated a new visual language of raw gestural painting fused with dense writing, and repeatedly reflected the oppression, exclusion and exploitation of Black people.
At the intersection of art, architecture and design, environments create and transform space into an immersive experience, inviting the audience to engage and interact. So far, art history has been focused on the works of male artists mostly from the US and Europe. Inside Other Spaces. Environments by Women Artists 1956 - 1976 aims to signpost a different narrative by highlighting women's fundamental contributions to this field. Redefining the canon, the exhibition features 11 pioneering women artists from three generations, spanning Asia, Europe, and the Americas, including Judy Chicago, Aleksandra Kasuba, and Lygia Clark. Given the experimental nature of such environments, many of these original works were deconstructed or destroyed. The detailed reconstructions, which are carried out with the help of restorers and based on archival photographs, construction plans, and material lists, are presented here for the first time. Conceived as a reference book for the historiography of environments, the publication comprises a wealth of visual material also on artists not featured in the show, such as Yayoi Kusama and Yoko Ono, providing leading scholars' essays and extensive bibliographies on environments and individual artists.
With numerous images, texts and a catalogue raisonné, this book gives insight into the aesthetic specificity and complexity of Helga Fanderl's Super 8 work, conveying its origins and development, process and materiality, and form and poetic nature. Her films, varying programmes and site-specific projections evoke the permanence of the impermanent. Constellations of the artist's short texts, as well as those of different authors and of film images, photographs and documents represent and reflect the many facets of her work. The book's graphic design alludes to the density and rhythmic nature of her filmic practice.
Since the advent of modernity, art has been associated with freedom, provocation and courage. In 1972, art was to unfold its potential as an emancipatory and creative force as part of the Gesamtkunstwerk of the XX. Olympic Games in Munich-that was the grand vision of its planners. The international avant-garde of the time, including Walter de Maria, Gerhard Richter, Andy Warhol and Dan Flavin, enthusiastically developed revolutionary concepts. Much remained a draft. After the tragic assassination of Israeli athletes, concepts such as the "Spielstraße" were canceled. This publication is the first to give an impression of the playful, participatory cultural programme of 1972. In the second part of the book, a multitude of voices from all over the world look to the future. International authors and artists use contemporary examples to convey the importance of the arts in shaping the democratic society of the future.
Experiences of violence and loss take shape in the work of internationally acclaimed Colombian artist Doris Salcedo. Although her sculptures and installations are often based on concrete events, feelings of grief, alienation and loss of home take on a universally valid, heartfelt expression in her works. Different materials such as stone and cement, wooden furniture, grass, petals, hair or pieces of clothing are transformed/processed and charged with meaning. Rarely do individual pain and collective grief find such a touching form and is their social overcoming formulated so forcefully. Created in close collaboration with the artist, the catalogue brings together seven series of works and features a total of over 100 individual pieces.DORIS SALCEDO (*1958, Bogotá) is internationally renowned for her sculptures, site-specific installations and public interventions that address the traumas of violence, racism and other forms of marginalization. In 2003, on the occasion of the Istanbul Biennial, she stacked 1,550 chairs between two buildings; in 2007, she drove a 167-meter-long crack into the Turbine Hall of the Tate Modern for her work Shibboleth. Her most recent work Uprooted (2020-22) will be presented at the Sharjah Biennial.
gmp · Architekten von Gerkan, Marg und Partner ist ein Architekturbüro mit Gründungssitz in Hamburg und sieben Standorten weltweit. Mit seinem generalistischen Ansatz und der Erfahrung aus rund sechzig Jahren realisiert gmp Projekte im Dialog mit der Bauherrschaft und den beteiligten Planungsdisziplinen in jedem Maßstab und kulturellen Kontext, in jeder Planungsphase und auf allen Kontinenten. Die Bandbreite der Projekte reicht vom Wohnhaus bis zum Hochhaus, vom Stadion bis zum Konzertsaal, vom Bürobau bis zur Brücke, von der Türklinke bis zur Stadtplanung.
Oberschwaben (Upper Swabia), between the Black Forest, Lake Constance and the Allgäu, offers a richness of Baroque architecture and picturesque rolling landscapes. Axel Hütte's images are not intended as portrayals of a cultural landscape and its history. They are photographic images, but not necessarily photographically realistic images. They are, collectively, titled Reflexio. Hütte works with the inversion of the colour spectrum, the reflection of the pictorial space. The photographer's interventions in the realistic image are a radical transformation of what the eye initially registered, they contradict experience; negate customary perception. Instead, they are an autonomous aesthetic construct and reveal a different side of reality. The two themes in these works-"Baroque" and "landscape"-thus become equivalent tools for thoroughly investigating pictorial realities.AXEL HÜTTE (*1951, Essen) studied photography in Düsseldorf Art Academy in Bernd and Hilla Becher's class, and is considered one of main representatives of the Düsseldorf School of Photography. His images take on a painterly quality as strives to make the world experienceable as real and at the same time as imagination. His works are part of the world's most important photo collections. Hütte lives and works in Düsseldorf.
Candida Höfer created a new series of works in Liechtenstein in autumn and winter 2021. It forms the starting point and the focus of the first exhibition conceived jointly by Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein and the Hilti Art Foundation. The publication documents this group of twenty photographs, which reflect her ongoing exploration of scenes of cultural life and architecture. A production diary, in the form of a collage of emails, text messages and notes by those involved in the project, affords an insight into the various processes, from the initial idea for the show to the final selection of works. Another section documents the exhibition itself, including selected works from classical modernism to the present from the collections of both institutions.Candida Höfer (* 1944 in Eberswalde, Germany) is among the most important representatives of the Düsseldorf School of Photography associated with Bernd and Hilla Becher. Her works are in international collections and have been exhibited widely and worldwide, including the documenta 11, 2002. Höfer lives and works in Cologne.
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