Ai Weiwei
Alighiero e Boetti
Stefan Arztmann
Marcel Broodthaers
Wolfgang Buchner
Clegg & Guttmann
Hanne Darboven
Mark Dion
Charles Eames
Ray Eames
Stephan Huber
Ulrike Konigshofer
Peter Kogler
Joseph Kosuth
Zoe Leonard
Sharon Lockhart
Richard Long
Constantin Luser
Vera Lutter
Tobias Madison
Helen Mirra
Matt Mullican
Vik Muniz
Rivane Neuenschwander
Gabriel Orozco
Nam June Paik
Grayson Perry
Michelangelo Pistoletto
Dieter Roth
Ernst Strouhal
Thomas Struth
Hiroshi Sugimoto
Sofie Thorsen
Corinne Wasmuht
Christopher Williams
Terry Winters
Heimo Zobernig
Katrin Bucher Trantow
Peter Pakesch
Heterotopias and Knowledge Spaces in Art. Connections to do with the intrinsic conditionality of the body, material, time, space - and also of an aesthetic experience - are gauged and measured in the works of the various artists. With contributions by Ai Weiwei, Alighiero e Boetti, Marcel Broodthaers, Clegg & Guttmann, Hanne Darboven, Mark Dion among many others. Curated by Katrin Bucher Trantow and Peter Pakesch.
Curators: Katrin Bucher Trantow and Peter Pakesch
Museums classify, collect, group, consider and exclude. Reference systems are set up, and, with
these, charts of an interpretable world are constructed. As part of their founding educational
role, museums enlighten and, on a basis of facts and references, form an interpretation of their
own existence given the conditions they find themselves in. Thus museums, like all exhibitions
with the things they contain, set themselves up as pared-down portrayals of the world,
becoming catalysers of a possible understanding and revelator of abstract realities, which –
particularly in contemporary art – stand in a double Foucault-style space-time situatedness, and
can be seen (both in terms of organization and inherently in the works) as part of a temporal and
ongoing institutional debate. Particularly in recent times, artists have constantly and critically
challenged this knowledge-storing duty of museums, examining it for its exclusiveness and
excludableness, and have explored museum collecting as an artistic strategy of its own.
People have endeavoured since primeval times to classify the confusing diversity and
simultaneity of their impressions, observations and feelings, and to give them permanent shape
and system. The earliest human systems artefacts are animal bones displaying regular, rhythmic
incisions, and ‘counting stones’ bearing evenly applied ochre-coloured dots. Thus things were
collected, processed and stored according to a defined pattern so as to save them from the
depredations of time. The aim was (inter alia) to gain a better understanding and appreciation of
the world around – in all its confusing and dizzying complexity – and in the best case pass that
knowledge on so it would survive one’s own lifetime and stand the test of time. The goal of the
systematising principles was thus to expound knowledge and facilitate higher-level cognitive
insight – knowledge about how the world functions, has functioned so far and will continue to
function with logical consistency and maximum certitude.
But making or inventing a system also constitutes a declaration as to what the world is and isn’t
like. Any attempt to design an ordering system thus has ontological implications. It sets up a
viewpoint or outlook on the world.
And this is the very point at which pictures play a key or crucial role in the design of ordering
systems and the generation of an ontology. Images are views of the world whose specific
structure generates, produces and renders visible a view of the world. Works of art that produce
ordering systems or develop systematic structures generate an ordered image of the world.
It is in this sense that the exhibition looks at the way contemporary art designs ordering
systems and focuses on the act of measuring. This mapping process, which leads to a pareddown portrayal of connections and the interrelationship of meanings, acts as a symbol and the
mirror of the human brain structure, with the analytical aim of discovering a single higher-level
(ontological?) structure of knowledge. Ultimately, this makes the question of a difference
between scientific and artistic systematizations of knowledge the implicit theme of the
exhibition, in that artistic systematizations endeavour chiefly to facilitate an aesthetic
experience of ordering interconnections where on the one hand the world as it appears to artists
in their work can be better understood and interpreted, and on the other hand the self, which is
part of the world, acquires important aspects of its personal, social and cultural identity.
In this way, connections to do with the intrinsic conditionality of the body, material, time, space
– and also of an aesthetic experience – are gauged and measured in the works of the various
artists. In a time frame from the late 1960s to today, cross-references open up in turn for the
exhibition space that, retrospectively and in themselves, register whole cosmoses and mutually
condition each other culturally and in terms of art history.
With contributions by Ai Weiwei, Alighiero e Boetti, Stefan Arztmann, Marcel Broodthaers,
Wolfgang Buchner, Clegg & Guttmann, Hanne Darboven, Mark Dion, Charles & Ray Eames,
Stephan Huber, Ulrike Königshofer, Peter Kogler, Joseph Kosuth, Zoe Leonard, Sharon Lockhart,
Richard Long, Constantin Luser, Vera Lutter, Tobias Madison, Helen Mirra, Matt Mullican, Vik
Muniz, Rivane Neuenschwander, Gabriel Orozco, Nam June Paik, Grayson Perry, Michelangelo
Pistoletto, Dieter Roth, Ernst Strouhal, Thomas Struth, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Sofie Thorsen, Corinne
Wasmuht, Christopher Williams, Terry Winters, Heimo Zobernig among others.
Image: Rivane Neuenschwander, Pangaea's Diaries, 2008
Courtesy of Stephen Friedman Gallery (London), Galeria Fortes Vilaça (Sao Paulo)
and Tanya Bonakdar Gallery (New York)
Universalmuseum Joanneum, Press Office Zoom in Contact Leitung: Sabine Bergmann T: +43/316/8017-9211 M: +43/664/8017-9211 F: +43/316/8017-9253 sabine.bergmann@museum-joanneum.at - presse@museum-joanneum.at
Mag. Christoph Pelzl T: +43/316/8017-9213 M: +43/664/8017-9213 F: +43/316/8017-9253 christoph.pelzl@museum-joanneum.at
Press conference: 10.06.2011, 10:30 Uhr
Opening: 10.06.2011, 7pm
Kunsthaus Graz, Space01 and Space02
Lendkai 1 - 8020 Graz
Opening hours
Tues–Sun: 10am–6pm
Special opening hours: 1–6pm on 12rd and 13th June (Whitsun), 23rd June (Corpus Christi), 15th August (Assumption Day)
Admission:
Adults € 8
Groups of 7 or more, senior citizens, conscripts and those
doing civilian service, people with disabilities € 6
School pupils, apprentices, students under 27 € 3
School pupils in class groups € 1.50
Family ticket (2 adults and children under 14) € 16
Children under 6 free