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18/6/2015

Artificial Facts

Kunsthaus Dresden Municipal Gallery of Contemporary Art, Dresden

Boundary Objects. Current debates in discourse among museums and in contemporary art are focusing on the future of European and African collections whose historical origins are directly tied to colonial geographies.


comunicato stampa

Curated by: Sophie Goltz

The showcases of the Ethnological Museum are shattered. Current debates in discourse among museums and in contemporary art are focusing on the future of European and African collections whose historical origins are directly tied to colonial geographies and ethnographies. In the light of the historical situation—the racist practice of human zoos, colonial exhibitions, medical-historical collections to classify humans, and one of the most extensive ethnological collections in Europe—questions related to restitution, the treatment of human remains and cultural heritage are attaining significance also for Dresden and Saxony.

With the exhibition Boundary Objects, the research and exhibition project Künstliche Tatsachen [Artificial Facts] (2014/2015) opens its third and final station in Dresden, following Cape Town (South Africa) und Porto-Novo (Benin). Works by international artists, partly created especially for the exhibition, pose a challenge to the visual colonization of the museal gaze, examining established visual regimes and calling the gestures of displays and represention—and ultimately the construction of the “other” in the museum—into question. The artists are interested in the future status of objects that were once collected as pieces of cultural-historical evidence, as souvenirs and trophies, and are today increasingly attributed to a globalized World Art. The showcases once used to display artefacts are now being replaced by spotlights and pedestals.Applying the term ‘Boundary Objects’, the exhibition focusses on the potential of objects to transcend established contexts and meanings: As opponents of their own history, the objects become mediators for larger contexts of a shared commemoration of the violence of unethical collecting, which filled the European museums of the 19th and early 20th century, and for the creation of new, transcultural narrations.

Image: Lisl Ponger, Western Still Life, 2013. C-print, 150 x 126 cm. Courtesy of Gallery Charim Vienna

Press Contact:
Karin Ziegler, kziegler@dresden.de

Opening: Friday, June 19, 7pm

Kunsthaus Dresden
Rähnitzgasse 8
01097 Dresden
Germany

Opening Hours:
Tu–Th 14–19pm, Fr–Su 11am–19pm
Friday free admission
Monday closed
Admission:
Entrance 4,00 euro

IN ARCHIVIO [9]
Artificial Facts
dal 18/6/2015 al 19/9/2015

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