The selection of works by 53 artists, form an astonishing and impressive panorama of internationally acclaimed modern and contemporary sculpture that brings together familiar works with unknown or rediscovered ones. This chronological overview spans the spectrum from the historic positions of the postwar years all the way to the present day.
curators: Tony Cragg, Siegfried Gohr, Robert Fleck, Marion Ackermann and Maria Müller-Schareck
Exhibited artists:
Joseph Beuys, Karl Bobek, Ralf Brög, Hede Bühl, Tony Cragg, Richard Deacon, Jürgen Drescher, Bogomir Ecker, Katharina Fritsch, Isa Genzken, Martin Gostner, Thomas Grünfeld, Erwin Heerich, Georg Herold, Martin Honert, Jörg Immendorff, Magdalena Jetelová, Irmin Kamp, Hubert Kiecol, Luise Kimme, Harald Klingelhöller, Imi Knoebel, Jannis Kounellis, Gereon Krebber, Norbert Kricke, Bernd Lohaus, Markus Lüpertz, Heinz Mack, Ewald Mataré, Rita McBride, Christian Megert, Reinhard Mucha, Wilhelm Mundt, Nam June Paik, A.R. Penck, Otto Piene, David Rabinowitch, Erich Reusch, Klaus Rinke, Dieter Roth, Ulrich Rückriem, Reiner Ruthenbeck, Leunora Salihu, Andreas Schmitten, Thomas Schütte, Fritz Schwegler, Pia Stadtbäumer, Rosemarie Trockel, Günther Uecker, Didier Vermeiren, Paloma Varga Weisz, Thomas Virnich, Franz Erhard Walther.
Since 1945, sculptors who have taught or studied at the renowned Düsseldorf Art Academy have been responsible for a series of decisive and influential artistic impulses. Professors such as Ewald Mataré, Erwin Heerich, Joseph Beuys, Klaus Rinke, Irmin Kamp, Fritz Schwegler, Rosemarie Trockel, Hubert Kiecol, Katharina Fritsch, and Rita McBride have influenced highly productive debates and discussions within the Academy and beyond. Like many of their colleagues and former students, they have contributed through their work to the development of sculpture over the past 70 years.
It was the sculptor Tony Cragg – a professor at the Academy for many years, and currently its director as well – who gave the impulse for this extraordinary survey exhibition from an insider‘s perspective. The selection of works by 53 artists, many of them produced in the context of the Academy itself, form an astonishing and impressive panorama of internationally acclaimed modern and contemporary sculpture that brings together familiar works with unknown or rediscovered ones. This chronological overview, which occupies three galleries of the K20, spans the spectrum from the historic positions of the postwar years all the way to the present day. The show demonstrates that precisely the multiplicity of artistic attitudes and concerns have been decisive in shaping teaching activities at the Academy.
Figurative sculpture has altered its appearance without losing its relevance, while the traditional materials of the sculptor – bronze, wood, stone, and clay – have remained despite the fact that Academy artists have worked as a matter of course with industrially manufactured substances and everyday objects, with ephemeral materials, with light, air, odor, music, film, etc. The appropriation of pre-existing objects exists on equal terms with constructive and shaping techniques, while new casting technologies have simplified and enriched work processes. This fertile juxtaposition of figurative and abstract sculpture, of traditional and unconventional materials, of references to tradition and receptiveness to extra-artistic impulses, in conjunction with an openness to innovative content within the field of tension between personal experience and social responsibility – these are the factors that continue to shape sculptural production at the Düsseldorf Academy, with its rich tradition, up to the present.
This exhibition was developed through a close collaboration between the Düsseldorf Art Academy and the Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen.
Supported by
The exhibition is fundey by Kunststiftung NRW.
Sponsors are: National-Bank AG, Essen, and Hogan Lovells International LLP
Image: Installation view "Sculpture at the Düsseldorf Art Academy from 1945 to the Present", K20 Grabbeplatz, photo: Achim Kukulies
Press contact:
Gerd Korinthenberg - Head of Communication phone: +49 (0)211.8381-730 fax: +49 (0)211.83 81-203 presse@kunstsammlung.de
Alissa Krusch Tel.: +49 (0)211.8381-117 fax: +49 (0)211.83 81-203 krusch@kunstsammlung.de
Opening of the Exhibition 19 February 2013, 7 p.m.
K20 Grabbeplatz
Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen
Grabbeplatz 5 - 40213 Düsseldorf
Hours:
Tuesday through Friday 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Saturdays, Sundays, holidays 11 a.m.-6 p.m.
Mondays closed
1st Wednesday of each month KPMG Kunstabend (free admission from 6 p.m.) 10 a.m.-10 p.m
Closed on Dec 24, 25 and 31.
Adults:
K20 12,00 EUR
K21 14,00 EUR
combination 25,00 EUR
Reduced Admission
K20 9,50 EUR
K21 11,00 EUR
combination 19,00 EUR
Children and Young People 6 to 18:
K20 2,50 EUR
K201 2,50 EUR
combination 4,00 EUR
SCHMELA HAUS Free admission.