Carla Ahlander
Kaucyila Brooke
Tammy Rae Carland
Carola Dertnig
Desiree Holman
Judith Hopf
Christina McPhee
Susanne Winterling
A group exhibition organized by Galerie Andreas Huber, Vienna and Silverman Gallery, San Francisco. The two met in Berlin in 2006 and realized they both worked with artists whose practices engaged with conceptual, feminist, political and gender issues.
"twice upon a time" is a group exhibition organized by Galerie
Andreas Huber, Vienna and Silverman Gallery, San Francisco. The two
met in Berlin in 2006 and realized they both worked with artists whose
practices engaged with conceptual, feminist, political and gender
issues. Curating a collaborative show highlights the commonality
between the programs of Huber and Silverman. The show first opens in
Vienna on November 22, 2008 and then travels to San Francisco in
March, 2009. twice upon a time is also a moment for each gallery to
interrupt their solo show format, to provide a new context and use the
gallery as a hub for a larger network.
The title underscores the fact that the exhibition will happen twice
and is also a reference to the history of the fairy tale. Historically
women fairy tale writers, also called conteuses, a term given to 17th
century French women, were silenced and relegated to a more domestic
literary sphere. However the conteuses saw their tales as amusements
for sophisticated adults in the salon and not for children. Like the
conteuses, the artists in twice upon a time challenge gender
expectations, engage with playful techniques, collect and urge us to
rethink our conception of storytelling and its history.
Desiree Holman’s playful video, I would do almost anything you asked
me to do documents the artist wearing flesh-like suites that allow her
to enact the role of male character’s by stepping into new “skin”. By
wearing the skin of the male character Holman investigates the
dynamics of romantic relationships as well as the male gaze. Like
Holman Judith Hopf’s practice defies authorial positioning and
investigates both behavior and identity. Romantic relationships often
start at seedy bars, clubs and lesbian parties which is the starting
point for Kaucyila Brooke’s ongoing body of work titled “The Boy
Mechanic” (various media, 1996 ongoing). In this excerpt from "The
Boy Mechanic/San Francisco"(2007-200_) she shows drawings (ink on
paper) of lesbian bar names from San Francisco's past and present
reorganized into her own idiosyncratic and fantasy narrative
categories . Tammy Rae Carland’s Photoback works document the back of
the photograph. Now the trace; who it was for, when, where, why it
was taken and how it has lived its life is the focus rather than the
initial image. Carland, like Brooke’s work documents memories
produced in public identity and social spaces and allows the viewer to
insert his/her own memories like a make up your own story. Through
these personal and public memories and narratives twice upon a time
explores looking for, the trace and the re-invention of ones self.
Tammy Rae Carland lives and works in Oakland, CA. Photobacks is an
ongoing photographic series of found personal photographs from the
1910's to the 1970's
Desiree Holman lives and works in Oakland, CA. I would do almost
anything you asked me to do is part of an installation-based project
call “Breath Holes” which incorporates video, sculpture and large
format photography.
Christina McPhee lives and works in Atascadero, CA. 47 Reds is a
series of drawings where the artist presses black paper onto colored
pigment left on the floor and draws over them. The drawings on top of
the pigment are reminiscent of an illustrator adding imagery to a book
that already existed.
Susanne Winterling lives in Berlin, Germany. Winterling applies a
method of working that weaves ideas and visual structures, both
personal and collective, past and future. Like in
lovemindmiddleheart, which layers an image of actress Tilda Swinton
and a library in a castle close to Prague in an attempt to capture
sensuality, memory and dreams.
Opening : Freitag 21.11.2008 19h
Galerie Andreas Huber
Capistrangrasse, 3 - Wien
Free admission