Hanna Weichselbaumer
Hildegund Amanshauser
Ines Doujak
Kader Attia
Geoffrey Batchen
Alison Rossiter
Sabine Bitter/Helmut Weber
Marc De Blieck
Team of Albrecht Meydenbauer
Iñaki Bonillas
Adam Budak
Duncan Campbell
Willie Doherty
Philippe van Cauteren
Vaari Claffey
Paul Allen
Moyra Davey
Geoff Dyer
Oscar de Marcos
Antje Ehmann
Silvia Eiblmayr
Francesca Woodman
Sabine Folie
Klaus Scherübel
Maria Fusco
Gauri Gill
Felix Gmelin
Barbad Golshiri
Boris Groys
Natalia Nikitin
Eva Grubinger
Ed van der Elsken
Karin Hanssen
Martin Herbert
August Sander
Matthias Herrmann
Antonia Hirsch
Martin Hochleitner
Rainer Iglar
Ruth Horak
Tatiana Lecomte
Geoffrey James
Anna Jermolaewa
Simone Kappeler
Eva Kotátková
Suzanne Lafont
Wilfried Lentz
Carleton Watkins
Declan Long
Tom Wood
Ken Lum
Anja Manfredi
Francis McKee
Pablo Guardiola
Rabih Mroué
Doina Popescu
Spring Hurlbut
Barbara Probst
Andreas Wutz
Meggy Rustamova
Mark Sealy
Robert Lebeck
Corin Sworn
Friedrich Tietjen
Walker & Walker
Scott Watson
Carlo Gentile
Peter Weibel
Hiroshi Sugimoto
Louwrien Wijers
Cathrien van Ommen
Paolo Woods
Tobias Zielony
Seiichi Furuya
Seamus Kealy
Reflections on Photography. Consisting of fifty photographs chosen by artists, curators and writers, and including a series of lectures and a publication, the exhibition takes its cue from the term 'punctum' coined by Roland Barthes: a linguistic device to examine the meaning of photography. The term refers, for example, to a striking detail in the photograph that captivates or 'wounds' the viewer, and completes the photograph as an object of reflection. Also on view a new work by Hanna Weichselbaumer.
Curated by Seamus Kealy
I was overcome with an ‘ontological’ desire: I wanted to learn at all costs what Photography was ‘in
itself’ ...
Roland Barthes, Camera Lucida
Punctum is an exhibition exploring the nature of photography today. Consisting of fifty photographs
chosen by artists, curators and writers, and including a series of lectures and a publication, Punctum
takes its cue from the term “punctum” coined by Roland Barthes in his final book Camera Lucida:
Reflections on Photography. Barthes uses this term as a linguistic device to examine the meaning of
photography. The term refers, for example, to a striking detail in the photograph that captivates or
“wounds” the viewer, and completes the photograph as an object of reflection. Barthes goes much
further than this, and ascribes a number of phenomenological considerations within the sphere of
meaning that is “punctum.”
This exhibition takes this concept and term of “punctum” as a starting point for invited participants to
select photographs that, for each of them, are emblematic of “punctum,” given today’s context for
photography and our constant grappling with aesthetics. Accompanying each chosen photograph is a
short text to complement and elucidate their decision. The backdrop to this project are ongoing
ontological considerations for photography, especially now, long after its digitization and further
universalization. Photography has always been a problematic medium, as a so-called indexical form,
as a replacer of memory, as a manipulated device, as an instrument of surveillance, control and
militarism, and even as an often-disputed art form. With photography’s evolution into the digital age,
these problematics have arguably multiplied. Author Geoff Dyer, for example, argues that digital
photography “seems devoid of any qualities of past time,” that it itself no longer holds the qualities that
Barthes would have ascribed to it. According to Barthes, the photograph is the “living image of a dead
thing” and thus has something of “resurrection” to it. Would that sentiment hold today, when the
photograph has become engulfed within the constant, ever-changing and unfixed flow of images?
Would we today agree to refer to Barthes’ terms such as the “profound madness,” “shared
hallucination,” or “the Intractable” as the elemental forms of a photograph? Today, we might ask, what
is its ontological status?
Accompanying this exhibition is a lecture series on topical subjects of photography today. A publication
co-produced with Fotohof edition is presented at the end of the exhibition. Lastly, a collaborative public
response to Punctum is mounted during the exhibition’s duration. Visit
instagram.com/salzburgerkunstverein to participate.
Lecture dates:
Saturday, 26 July 2014, 4–6 pm
Boris Groys, Ruth Horak, Friedrich Tietjen
Saturday, 20 September 2014, 5–7 pm
Seamus Kealy, Francis McKee, Esther Ruelfs
& Catalog presentation Punctum
Participants/ Artists & Photographers:
Hildegund Amanshauser (AT) – Ines Doujak (AT)
Kader Attia (F) – Kader Attia
Geoffrey Batchen (NZ) – Alison Rossiter (USA)
Sabine Bitter/Helmut Weber (AT) – Sabine Bitter/Helmut Weber
Marc De Blieck (BE) – Team of Albrecht Meydenbauer (DE)
Iñaki Bonillas (MX) – Iñaki Bonillas
Adam Budak (PL) – unknown
Duncan Campbell (IE) – Willie Doherty (IE)
Philippe van Cauteren (BE) – unknown
Vaari Claffey (IE) – Paul Allen (USA)
Moyra Davey (CA) – Moyra Davey
Geoff Dyer (GB) – Oscar de Marcos (E)
Antje Ehmann (DE) – Antje Ehmann
Silvia Eiblmayr (AT) – Francesca Woodman (USA)
Sabine Folie (AT) - Klaus Scherübel (AT)
Maria Fusco (GB) – unknown
Gauri Gill (IND) – Gauri Gill
Felix Gmelin (DE/SE) – Felix Gmelin
Barbad Golshiri (IR) – Barbad Golshiri
Boris Groys (RUS) – Natalia Nikitin (RUS)
Eva Grubinger (AT) – Ed van der Elsken (NL)
Karin Hanssen (BE) – unknown
Martin Herbert (GB) – August Sander (DE)
Matthias Herrmann (AT) – Matthias Herrmann
Antonia Hirsch (DE) – unknown
Martin Hochleitner (AT) – Rainer Iglar (AT)
Ruth Horak (AT) – Tatiana Lecomte (F)
Geoffrey James (CA) – Geoffrey James
Anna Jermolaewa (RUS/AT) – Anna Jermolaewa
Simone Kappeler (CH) – Simone Kappeler
Eva Kotátková (CS) – Eva Kotátková
Suzanne Lafont (F) – Suzanne Lafont
Wilfried Lentz (NL) – Carleton Watkins (USA)
Declan Long (IE) – Tom Wood (IE)
Ken Lum (CA) – Ken Lum
Anja Manfredi (AT) – Anja Manfredi
Francis McKee (IE) – Pablo Guardiola (PR)
Rabih Mroué (RL) – unknown
Doina Popescu (CA) – Spring Hurlbut (CA)
Barbara Probst (DE) – Andreas Wutz (DE)
Meggy Rustamova (GE/BE) – unknown
Mark Sealy (GB) – Robert Lebeck (DE)
Corin Sworn (GB) – unknown
Friedrich Tietjen (DE) – unknown
Walker & Walker (IE) - Walker & Walker
Scott Watson (CA) / Carlo Gentile (IT)
Peter Weibel (AT) – Hiroshi Sugimoto (J)
Louwrien Wijers (NL) – Cathrien van Ommen (NL)
Paolo Woods (NL/CA) – Paolo Woods
Tobias Zielony (DE) – Seiichi Furuya (J)
---
26.07.–21.09.2014
1 Picture in CaféCult
Hanna Weichselbaumer
ALL/EIN/HEIT
As part of the exhibition series in the Café Cult #65 Hanna Weichselbaumer is showing a new work.
Image: Gauri Gill, Jogiyon ka Dera, from the series „Notes from the Desert”, 1999-2010, baryt paper, 40 x 30 cm, © Gauri Gill, courtesy of Gauri Gill (selected by Gauri Gill)
For further details & photo material please contact:
Michaela Lederer, Communication & curatorial assistance, Contact:
lederer@salzburger-kunstverein.at, +43 662 842294-15
Press conference: Fr, 25 July 2014, 12.30 pm
Opening: Fr, 25 July 2014, 8 pm
Salzburger Kunstverein
Künstlerhaus
Hellbrunner Straße 3 - 5020 Salzburg
Opening hours exhibition: Tue-Sun 12-7pm