Pawel Althamer
Eric Andersen
Julieta Aranda
Artsat
Angela Bulloch
Bjorn Dahlem
Vladimir Dubossarsky
Alexander Vinogradov
Charles and Ray Eames
Sylvie Fleury
Agnes Fuchs
Daniel Fuchs
Geo Fuchs
Loris Greaud
Judith Hopf
Dona Jalufka
Toril Johannessen
William Kentridge
Lena Lapschina
Simone Leigh
Jen Liu
Basim Magdy
Mahony
Aleksandra Mir
Jyoti Mistry
monochrom
Mariko Mori
Gianni Motti
Deimantas Narkevicius
Katie Paterson
Simon Patterson
Amalia Pica
Christian Pusswald
Robert Rauschenberg
Pipilotti Rist
Thomas Ruff
Tom Sachs
Wilhelm Sasnal
Charles Schmidt
Michael Snow
Andrei Sokolov
Hildegard Spielhofer
Eve Sussman
Rufus Corporation
Rirkrit Tiravanija
Keith Tyson
Christian Waldvogel
Andy Warhol
Orson Welles
Nives Widauer
Jane & Louise Wilson
Virginie Yassef
Carey Young
Gerald Matt
Walter Famler
Christian Koberl
Catherine Hug
The exhibition reflects the wide range of aesthetic, metaphoric and political dimensions associated with the idea of "outer space" as refracted in the prism of art. Focusing on present-day art, the show presents more than 50 artistic perspectives from 18 nations and 5 decades. The different media employed go to show the thematic heterogeneity of the works exhibited, from painting, 16-mm film, video, and animation film to drawings, prints, photographs, and multimedia installations.
An exhibition of the Kunsthalle Wien in cooperation with the Natural History Museum Vienna
Artists represented in the exhibition: Paweł Althamer, Eric Andersen, Julieta Aranda, Artsat, Angela Bulloch, Björn
Dahlem, Vladimir Dubossarsky & Alexander Vinogradov, Charles and Ray Eames, Sylvie Fleury, Agnes Fuchs, Daniel
& Geo Fuchs, Loris Gréaud, Judith Hopf, Dona Jalufka, Toril Johannessen, William Kentridge, Lena Lapschina,
Simone Leigh, Jen Liu, Basim Magdy, Mahony, Aleksandra Mir, Jyoti Mistry, monochrom, Mariko Mori, Gianni Motti,
Deimantas Narkevičius, Katie Paterson, Simon Patterson, Amalia Pica, Christian Pußwald, Robert Rauschenberg,
Pipilotti Rist, Thomas Ruff, Tom Sachs, Wilhelm Sasnal, Charles Schmidt, Michael Snow, Andrei Sokolov, Hildegard
Spielhofer, Eve Sussman & Rufus Corporation, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Keith Tyson, Christian Waldvogel, Andy Warhol,
Orson Welles, Nives Widauer, Jane & Louise Wilson, Virginie Yassef, Carey Young.
Curator: Cathérine Hug
Board Gerald Matt, Director of the Kunsthalle Wien; Walter Famler, movement KOCMOC/Gagarin Group; Christian
Köberl, Director of the Museum of Natural History Vienna
Outer space is not only a physically extending sphere, but also a symbol: for centuries, man’s dreams and visions
have been concerned with conquering the “extraterrestrial zone,” with getting to know worlds beyond Earth, and
even with colonizing other planets. “Space is the Place,” proclaimed the musician Sun Ra, and hundreds of science
fiction novels and movies testify to this yearning for the other, for the unknown, for the abyss of infinity, which
presents itself as equally tempting and threatening.
Since the production of rockets in the 20th century provided us for the first time with the possibility of actually
conquering the “high frontier”, outer space turned into an emotionally charged scene of geopolitical strategy. In the
Cold War between the United States of America and the Soviet Union, the fight for dominance in space had a mass-
psychological and propagandist impact: after the Sputnik “crisis” of 1957 and the first manned space flight with the
cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin in 1961 – the fiftieth anniversary of which provides the special occasion for this exhibition –
the US invested tremendous amounts of money into the project of getting people to the moon. When they
succeeded in doing so in 1969, the feat became one of the greatest media events of the twentieth century,
The exhibition reflects the wide range of aesthetic, metaphoric and political dimensions associated with the idea of
“outer space” as refracted in the prism of art. Outer space figures as a place of longing and a projection screen for
utopias oriented toward alternative forms of life on other planets, but also as a threatening sphere triggering fears of
the unknown, of impending meteor strikes, and even of invasions of aliens. The panorama of artistic explorations of
the subject spans from figurative renderings of the firmament, rockets, and satellites to works critical of realism that
search for ways to convey “cosmic feelings” in the tradition of such artists as Kazimir Malevich (1878–1935).
Focusing on present-day art, the exhibition presents more than fifty artistic perspectives from eighteen nations and
five decades. The different media employed go to show the thematic heterogeneity of the works exhibited, from
painting, 16-mm film, video, and animation film to drawings, prints, photographs, and multimedia installations. Robert
Rauschenberg was one of the privileged artists present at the launch of a rocket in 1969, and in later years Lena
Lapschina and Jane & Louise Wilson were also to witness such an event and reflected upon the experience in their
work. NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) provided Rauschenberg with detailed maps, charts,
and photographs of the Apollo 11 mission in 1969/70, which served as a basis for his work Stoned Moon; this series
of lithographs has rarely been presented in Europe to date. Andrei Sokolov was a close friend of the cosmonaut
Alexey Leonov (the first human to conduct a space walk in 1965) and began to rely on this biographical background
for his work as a painter in 1966.
In addition to about eighty works by such acclaimed artists as Turner Prize winner Keith Tyson and winner of the
Vincent van Gogh Biennial Award Wilhelm Sasnal film makers like Alexandra Mir, William Kentridge, and Michael
Snow, installation artists like Björn Dahlem, and intervention artists like Gianni Motti, Tom Sachs, and Rirkrit
Tiravanija, Space. About a Dream also presents numerous surprising perspectives of a younger generation of artists
lincluding Julieta Aranda, Loris Gréaud, Jen Liu, Amalia Pica, and Virginie Yassef.
For her series Night Sky (2007/08), the Canadian artist Angela Bulloch used a software program, to calculate views
of the universe as seen from extraterrestrial perspectives and not from that of an inhabitant of the Earth. Stars in a
night sky provide the Norwegian Toril Johannessen with the material for her installation Variable Stars (2009), which
draws on the Harvard College Observatory’s extensive archives of photographic plates and the theory on the
calculation of distances between galaxies which was developed in 1908. The point of view we are confronted with in
the sculptural installation Global Globes (2010/11) by Nives Widauer is completely different: the artist has assembled
a new map of the world from more than 160 different Earth globes. The overall picture is conveyed to the visitor via a
live stream granting a look into the Meteorite Hall in Vienna’s Museum of Natural History.
Thanks to this collaboration with the Museum of Natural History, it will also be possible to admire three room-
spanning works by the artists Artsat Pipilotti Rist, and Sylvie Fleury in the Kunsthalle Wien’s neighbor institution,
namely in its entrance hall and the Meteorite Hall, which houses one of the oldest and most comprehensive
collections of its kind. Wind me up, Scotty! – an exhibition presenting extraordinary space toys from the collection of
Andreas Karl – will also be shown there.
Catalogue
Edited by KUNSTHALLE wien, Gerald Matt, Cathérine Hug, and Verlag für moderne Kunst Nürnberg, Germany
Technical details: German and English; golden softcover with blue silk-screen print; 180 color illustrations; ca. 320
pages; graphic design: Chris Goennawein; € 29.–
Text contributions by Sigmund Jähn (1st German cosmonaut participating in the Soviet Intercosmos program); Walter
Famler (cultural theorist) on Yuri Gagarin; Justin Hoffmann (art historian) on the relationship between pop culture,
outer space, and art; Cathérine Hug (curator of the Kunsthalle Wien) on the concept of the exhibition; Christian
Köberl (university professor of planetary geology and Director of the Museum of Natural History Vienna) on possible
scenarios after a meteor strike; Mikhail Ryklin (Russian philosopher) on his experiences with weightlessness; Kai-Uwe
Schrogl (Director of ESPI – European Space Policy Institute); as well as excerpts from fictional works by Ray
Bradbury, Italo Calvino, Philip K. Dick, R. Buckminster Fuller, Yuri Gagarin, Stanislaw Lem, Norman Mailer, Judith
Merril, Victor Pelevin, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, H. G. Wells, Walt Whitman, and Konstantin Tsiolkovsky.
Accompanying program
Besides putting the main focus on works of art and offering a comprehensive educational program for kids and
young people, the project has been conceived to comprise an intense dialogue with experts in the fields of planetary
geology, astronomy, space law, and related disciplines open for interested laymen and experts. The lectures and
talks will take place alternately in the Museum of Natural History Vienna and the Kunsthalle Wien, as well as in a
number of other co-operating institutions. A complete list of events will be available when the exhibition opens.
Press contact:
Claudia Bauer Telephone: +43-1-521 89-1222, fax: +43-1-521 89-1217, e-mail: presse@kunsthallewien.at
Press conference: Thursday, March 31, 2011, 10 a.m.
Opening: Thursday, March 31, 2011 7 p.m.
Program:
Welcome: Gerald Matt, Director Kunsthalle Wien
On the exhibition: Cathérine Hug, Curator Kunsthalle Wien
On space flight: Franz Viehböck, Austrian cosmonaut
Opening: Heinz Fischer, Federal President of the Republic of Austria
8.30 p.m. – Opening in the Natural History Museum
Welcome: Christian Köberl, Director of the Natural History Museum Vienna
On the exhibition: Franz Viehböck, Austrian cosmonaut
The Natural History Museum, which is showing works by Artsat, Sylvie Fleury, and Pipilotti Rist as part of the
exhibition, will be open until 10 p.m. on the night of the opening.
Special guests:
Walter Famler, Movement KOCMOC/Group Gagarin
Alexander Wolkow, Russian cosmonaut
Image: Lena Lapschina, spacewalk
Kunsthalle Wien
Museumsplatz 1, 1070 Vienna
www.kunsthallewien.at
Daily 10 a.m. – 7 p.m., Thur 10 a.m. – 9 p.m.
Natural History Museum
Burgring 7, 1010 Vienna
www.nhm-wien.ac.at
Thur. – Mon 9 a.m. – 6.30 p.m., Wed 9 a.m. – 9 p.m., Tue closed