Ruben Aubrecht
Judith Barry
Robert Barry
Stefan Bruggemann
Hemali Bhuta
Shreyas Karle
Pierre Bismuth
Marinus Boezem
George Brecht
Daniel Buren
Andre Cadere
Marcel Duchamp
Maria Eichhorn
Urs Fischer
Dan Flavin
Andrea Fraser
Liam Gillick
Felix Gonzalez-Torres
Hans Haacke
Edward Kienholz
Yves Klein
Joseph Kosuth
Sol LeWitt
Ken Lum
Piero Manzoni
Gordon Matta-Clark
Josiah McElheny
Allan Kaprow
Jonathan Monk
Robert Morris
Antoni Muntadas
Yoko Ono
Cesare Pietroiusti
Adrian Piper
Emilio Prini
Robert Projansky
Seth Siegelaub
Raqs Media Collective
Robert Rauschenberg
Sharmila Samant
Joe Scanlan
David Shrigley
Daniel Spoerri
Haim Steinbach
Superflex
Rirkrit Tiravanija
Ben Vautier
Lawrence Weiner
Franz West
Ian Wilson
Cerith Wyn Evans
Carey Young
Andrea Zittel
Heimo Zobernig
Susan Hapgood
Cornelia Lauf
Lorenzo Benedetti
Martha Buskirk
Daniel McClean
Certificates of Authenticity in Art. Providing examples of artists' certificates from the past fifty years, this exhibition reveals how roles have shifted and developed, as well as how the materials and content of art have changed too. Concise didactic texts will assist the viewer in contextualizing each inclusion in the presentation.
In Deed: Certificates of Authenticity in Art is a traveling exhibition curated by Susan Hapgood and Cornelia Lauf, that is accompanied by a fully-illustrated catalogue with texts by the curators: Lorenzo Benedetti, Martha Buskirk and Daniel McClean.
Certificates of authenticity are a critical aspect of art works today. They often even embody the artwork itself, while referring to it, serving as its deed, legal statement and fiscal invoice. Certificates by artists validate the authorship and originality of the work and they allow the work of art to be positioned in the marketplace as a branded product--no matter how immaterial or transient that product may be. Whereas the inherent importance of any given work of art should be self-evident to the connoisseur’s eye, certificates point the focus elsewhere and prove that material or aesthetic qualities in an object sometimes do not suffice in constituting the work of art. In our globalized, capitalist present, the certificate and its implications about artistic thinking have become an instrument of business enterprise, as well as a philosophical statement about the nature of an artwork. Certificates have legal and ontological implications that make them fascinating documents of changing attitudes towards art and the role of artists.
Providing examples of artists’ certificates from the past fifty years, this exhibition reveals how roles have shifted and developed, as well as how the materials and content of art have changed too. Concise didactic texts will assist the viewer in contextualizing each inclusion in the presentation. Ranging from the most official looking printed documents, with their imprimatur of institutionalization, to dashed-off notations that perform the same definitive function in constituting and defining the parameters of a given art work.
Artists in the Exhibition:
Ruben Aubrecht, Judith Barry, Robert Barry/Stefan Brüggemann, Hemali Bhuta ir Shreyas Karle, Pierre Bismuth, Marinus Boezem, George Brecht, Daniel Buren, André Cadere, Marcel Duchamp, Maria Eichhorn, Urs Fischer, Dan Flavin, Andrea Fraser, Liam Gillick, The Felix Gonzalez-Torres Foundation, Hans Haacke, Edward Kienholz, Yves Klein, Joseph Kosuth, Sol LeWitt, Ken Lum, Piero Manzoni, Gordon Matta-Clark, Josiah McElheny ir Allan Kaprow, Jonathan Monk, Robert Morris, Antoni Muntadas, Yoko Ono, Cesare Pietroiusti, Adrian Piper, Emilio Prini, Robert Projansky ir Seth Siegelaub, Raqs Media Collective, Robert Rauschenberg, Sharmila Samant, Joe Scanlan, David Shrigley, Daniel Spoerri, Haim Steinbach, Superflex, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Ben Vautier, Lawrence Weiner, Franz West, Ian Wilson, Cerith Wyn Evans, Carey Young, Andrea Zittel, Heimo Zobernig
Image: Carey Young, Donorcard, 2005. Offset printing on card stock, signed, two-sided, 5.6 x 8.7 cm (2 3/16 x 3 3/8"). Courtesy of the artist.
Press, public relations and excursion
Renata Dubinskaitė: +370 5 2121954, mob.: +370 687 85713; renata@cac.lt
Opening: 19th June, Wednesday, 6 pm.
The Contemporary Art Centre (CAC)
Vokieciu 2 LT- 01130 Vilnius Lithuania
Opening hours:
Tuesday - Sunday 12:00 - 20:00
Tickets:
Full price 8 LTL
Concession - 4 LTL
Free entry to exhibitions on Wednesdays