The Sixties is the largest show ever of Claes Oldenburg's path-breaking and emblematic early work of the 1960s. It features the installation 'The Street' and its graffiti-inspired depictions of modern life in the big city, the famous consumer articles of 'The Store' to the spectacular everyday objects of the 'modern home' - telephone, toilet bowl, bathtub, fan, saw, and light switch - his first designs for enormous monuments and the mumok's Mouse Museum, 381 objects since the late 1950s. Projection, the two-channel video installation by Andrea Fraser, unites key aspects of her entire oeuvre. Two fifty-minute videos are based on records of the artist's intensive psychoanalysis sessions.
Claes Oldenburg
The Sixties
04.02. - 28.05
curated by Achim Hochdörfer
With his humorous and profound depictions of everyday objects, Claes Oldenburg is
one of the most important and popular artists since the late 1950s. Not only has he
been a major figure in Pop art, performance art, and installation art but he has also
been in partnership with Coosje van Bruggen a profound influence on art in public
spaces with his monumental “Large Scale Projects” in numerous major cities
worldwide. One central point of reference in Oldenburg’s oeuvre is the industrially
produced object—the object as commodity, which in ever new metamorphoses of
media and form becomes a conveyer of culture and symbol of the imagination,
desires, and obsessions of the capitalist world.
Organized by mumok, this is the largest show ever of Oldenburg’s path-breaking and
emblematic early work of the 1960s. Numerous icons of Pop art will be seen in the
exhibition, beginning with the installation The Street and its graffiti-inspired
depictions of modern life in the big city and continuing to the famous consumer
articles of The Store to the spectacular everyday objects of the “modern home”:
telephone, toilet bowl, bathtub, fan, saw, and light switch. Another chapter is
dedicated to Oldenburg’s first designs for enormous monuments of his consumer
objects for public spaces. The exhibition concludes with mumok’s Mouse Museum, a
walk-in miniature museum in the form of a Geometric Mouse, for which Oldenburg
has collected 381 objects since the late 1950s. With its souvenirs, kitsch objects,
and studio models, the Mouse Museum demonstrates the incredible cultural variety—
and mysteriousness—of capitalist society. The Geometric Mouse, a central motif
within the artist’s oeuvre, represents with its reduction to abstract basic figures of
formal invention a dovetailing of high art and popular culture. It also functions as
Claes Oldenburg’s alter ego.
No other artist of the modern era has thematized to the same extent the traditional
oppositions between the work of art and the commodity, the museum and the
department store, the contemplative appreciation of art and fetishized consumer
behavior. Oldenburg is interested in the ambivalence of the modern world: the
“genuine” is sought in the cliché and, conversely, the vulgar in serious art.
“Painting,” so Oldenburg, “which has slept so long in its gold crypts, in its glass
graves, is asked to go for a swim, is given a cigarette, a bottle of beer, its hair
rumpled, is given a shove and tripped, is taught to laugh, is given clothes of all kinds,
goes for a ride on a bike, goes flying, goes driving at 100 mph.”
It is a special privilege to be able to realize this exhibition in collaboration with Claes
Oldenburg, who was born in Stockholm in 1929. Works and groups of works that
have been rarely or even never before seen could thus be integrated into the
presentation: drawings, photographs and films by the artist himself, and especially
notebook pages that offer unique insights into his witty thought processes. In
addition, since the 1960s Oldenburg has set in motion an analytical and humorous
game with the conditions and forms of presentation of modern exhibitions:
sculptures hang on the walls or swing from the ceiling; they are placed too low or too
high; pedestals are too large or too small; and his “soft sculptures” change scale and
consistency. The whole scenery of the exhibition seems like a carnivalesque theatre
play performed by objects from our daily lives.
Exhibition Tour
This exhibition, organized by mumok, will travel to the
Ludwig Museum in Cologne (22 June–30 September 2012), the
Guggenheim Museum Bilbao (30 October 2012–17 February 2013), the
Museum of Modern Art, New York (14 April–5 August 2013), and the
Walker Art Center in Minneapolis (13 September 2013–12 January 2014).
Exhibition Catalogue
The exhibition will be accompanied by catalogue designed in collaboration with
Claes Oldenburg that includes both his famous major works and numerous
previously unpublished works and materials. It contains essays by Benjamin H. D.
Buchloh, Achim Hochdörfer, Branden W. Joseph, Gregor Stemmrich, and Ann
Temkin and an extensive chronology by Maartje Oldenburg.
Thanks are due to the exhibition’s main sponsor: Ruefa, the mumok sponsor: Dorotheum, and the
media partners: Der Standard and Wien live. This exhibition is made possible through support from
the Terra Foundation for American Art. Kindly supported by the Peter and Irene Ludwig Foundation.
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Andrea Fraser
Projection, 2008
04.02. - 03.06.
Since the 1990s, the American artist Andrea Fraser has been one of the most significant protagonists in the art of institutional critique. She analyzes the functions of art and the art business in her work, taking sociological, psychoanalytical, and feminist perspectives. In her performances, texts, video and audio works, Fraser reveals covert personal and social conflicts within the art business. She works humorously and provocatively, and with great acting skill.
The two-channel video installation Projection unites key aspects of her entire oeuvre. Two fifty-minute videos are based on records of the artist’s intensive psychoanalysis sessions. Fraser plays both roles - on the one hand herself, an artist critical of the institution with all her fantasies, self-doubt, and paradoxical involvement in that system. She also plays the psychoanalyst who questions the function of art from the perspective of a social “super-ego.” This leads to a dramatic and multi-layered dialog, in which the visitors are included as they stand inserted between these two life-size projections. The receiver thus takes up the position of the partner, to whom Fraser demonstrates the whole spectrum of inner conflicts in the light of an art system driven by success and overloaded with idealism.
Image: Claes Oldenburg, U.S.A. Flag, 1960. Muslin soaked in plaster over wire frame, painted with tempera, 61 x 76.2 x 8.9 cm. Courtesy National Gallery of Art, Washington © Claes Oldenburg
Press contacts
Eva Engelberger, T +43 1 52500-1400
eva.engelberger@mumok.at
Barbara Hammerschmied, T +43 1 52500-1450
barbara.hammerschmied@mumok.at
F +43 1 52500-1300
press@mumok.at
www.mumok.at/presse
Exhibition opening: 3 February 2012, 7 p.m.
Conversation with the Artist: 4 February 2012, 7 p.m. Claes Oldenburg in Conversation with Curator Achim Hochdörfer
mumok
Museumsplatz 1, 1070 Vienna
Opening hours
Monday: 2 – 7 p.m.
Tuesday to Sunday: 10 a.m. – 7 p.m.
Thursday: 10 a.m. – 9 p.m.
Tickets
Normal € 9
Reduced € 7,20 or € 6,50