Alongside a host of her celebrated photocollages from the 1980s and a four-channel video work of 2004, Kruger is for the most part presenting new installations that have been especially conceived. Garcia's conceptual works comprise photographs, films, performances, and installations frequently involving actors as well as members of the audience.
Barbara Kruger
Believe + Doubt
Curators Yilmaz Dziewior and Rudolf Sagmeister
The solo exhibition by Barbara Kruger especially designed by the
artist for the Kunsthaus gives visitors a chance to explore the wide
range of her artistic practice in different media. Alongside a host of
her celebrated photocollages from the 1980s and a four-channel
video work of 2004, she is for the most part presenting new installations in Bregenz that have been especially conceived for the unique
Kunsthaus architecture.
What makes her videos, installations, collages, posters, and
photographs compelling, among other things, is how she consciously
reflects the art system—its hierarchies and strategies as well as its
presentational and distributional relations. Again and again, Barbara
Kruger breaks out of this system’s closed circuit by conceiving
projects for magazines, poster walls, or other media and sites in
public space.
Throughout her career, Barbara Kruger has reflected on or
augmented the formal, thematic, and visual messages of these
specific communication strategies, often unmasking their problematic ambiguity in the process. Just as the distribution and presentation sites she has used (e.g. magazines, posters) are characterized by
a certain transience and intensified circulation, so too Kruger often
insists on the ephemeral physical status of her works, since her wall
and large-scale spatial installations are usually destroyed at the end
of an exhibition. That they can be installed again in the same or in a
different form on another occasion is just one of the ways in which
the artist comments, with relish and wit, on the complex commodity
character of art.
Ultimately Barbara Kruger’s works are characterized by a high
level of social commitment, advocating women’s rights, freedom
of opinion, a critical awareness of the seductions of consumer culture,
and of how power, or the lack of it, determines the feel of our days
and nights. These—in the best sense of the word—striking works are
captivating for their immediacy, their directness of address, involving the viewer by means of questions or clear-cut statements.
Depending on their message, her text-image designs provoke the
viewer to contradict, endorse, laugh, or ponder. No one is left cold.
Barbara Kruger has selected text works for the six kub Billboards
along Seestraße between the train station and Kunsthaus Bregenz.
Her iconic text-images directly address passersby with short poetic-philosophical statements and inquiries, occasionally also utilizing the
German language, so as to more closely engage the local public.
Barbara Kruger’s pictures and words engage issues of power, pleasure,
money, love, and death. Her photographs, large scale textual installations, and immersive multi-channel video work address the viewer
through a kind of intensely spatialized visual display.
The œuvre, which has been continuously developed over
several decades, will be examined from differing perspectives in an
in-depth conversation between the artist, Beatriz Colomina (architectural theorist and historian), and Mark Wigley (architect and
architectural theorist). The concept of the exhibition at Kunsthaus
Bregenz, and the new work which has been especially produced for
it, will be examined in Yilmaz Dziewior’s introductory essay.
The catalog’s comprehensive documentation of the installation
in generous photographic spreads, designed in close cooperation
with the artist, demonstrates the enormous currency of the statements as well as the powerful forms of address within Barbara
Kruger’s work.
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KUB Arena
Dora García
The Sinthome Score
Curator Eva Birkenstock
The Spanish artist Dora García’s conceptual works comprise photographs, films, performances, and installations frequently involving
actors from performance and theater as well as members of the
audience. She designs stories, scenarios, and situations which permit
her to experiment, interfere with, and invert expectations. The
results are performative, site-specific ensembles opening up the
exhibition space.
Dora García has taken part in numerous important exhibitions,
such as the 54th Venice Biennale 2011, where she curated the
Spanish Pavilion as well as dOCUMENTA (13) in Kassel in 2012. Her
recent project The Joycean Society (2013) is a film project in which
she accompanied a James Joyce reading group based in Zurich for
a year, whilst they developed ways of interpreting and translating
Finnegans Wake.
An interest in language is crucial to all of García’s work: for
creating communities, as an access code to secret societies, as a
space for action, as well as the structure of the unconscious. For The
Sinthome Score, developed especially for kub Arena, García raises
questions of representation and translation whilst incorporating the
collaboration of the local population.
For the exhibition, kub Arena will be opening an additional
entrance bearing the inscription »Sinthome.« The term originates
from a text by the French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan, Seminar
XXIII — Le Sinthome (1975—1976). An involvement with James Joyce’s
work caused Lacan to reconsider his model of the Borromean rings,
expanding it to include the Sinthome, the core of the subject binding
the three rings. The converted backdoor of kub offers an alternative
way of entering the institution, to approach this area made spatial,
from the rear whilst simultaneously encountering objects and people.
Using the German translation by Max Kleiner (2007), Dora García has
constructed a score for performers from the region. The ground
floor of the Kunsthaus will provide a stage for numerous interpretations of García’s score, an exploration of the unconscious in which
the public can participate.
Image: Barbara Kruger
Twelve, 2004
Video projection with four projections,
15 min loop with 12 sequences with 12 conversations
Dimensions variable
Installation view 2nd floor, Kunsthaus Bregenz
Photo: Markus Tretter
© Kunsthaus Bregenz
Press contact:
Birgit Albers ext. -413 b.albers@kunsthaus-bregenz.at
Press Conference Thursday, October 17, 12 noon The exhibition is opened for the press at 11 a.m.
Opening Friday, October 18, 2013, 7 p.m.
Kunsthaus Bregenz
Karl-Tizian-Platz 6900 Bregenz Austria
Hours:
Tuesday to Sunday 10 a.m.—6 p.m.
Thursday 10 a.m.—9 p.m.
1.11.13, 10 a.m.—6 p.m. | 8.12.13, 10 a.m.—6 p.m.
24. and 25.12.13 closed | 26.12.13, 10 a.m.—9 p.m.
31.12.13 closed | 1.1.14, 2 p.m.—6 p.m.
6.1.14, 10 a.m.—6 p.m.