Kunsthaus Bregenz
Bregenz
Karl Tizian Platz A-6900
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Jenny Holzer
dal 10/6/2004 al 5/9/2004
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10/6/2004

Jenny Holzer

Kunsthaus Bregenz, Bregenz

The politics of US foreign policy in the Middle East is the subject of Truth before power, Jenny Holzer's Kunsthaus Bregenz project. The complicated dialectic of decision-making and public debate, as it has unfolded through the presidencies of Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, William Jefferson Clinton, and George W. Bush, is explored in text devoted to such issues as the international trade in arms and oil, the 'war'on terrorism, 9/11, the FBI and CIA, and Congress's oversight of the intelligence community. As a companion piece to her installation in the lobby of the Kunsthaus, Holzer will place a monumental, text-branded tree in the nave of the Johanniterkirche Feldkirch.


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Truth Before Power

The politics of US foreign policy in the Middle East is the subject of TRUTH BEFORE POWER, Jenny Holzer's Kunsthaus Bregenz project. The complicated dialectic of decision-making and public debate, as it has unfolded through the presidencies of Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, William Jefferson Clinton, and George W. Bush, is explored in text devoted to such issues as the international trade in arms and oil, the 'war'on terrorism, 9/11, the FBI and CIA, and Congress's oversight of the intelligence community.

For the most part, the installation's text has been taken verbatim from US government documents. Many were 'classified' at the time they were written. Under the landmark Freedom of Information Act passed in 1966, all are now public record, though some remain heavily redacted.

On the museum's second floor, where electronic signs are programmed in red and amber, Holzer seeks to convey the welter of voices involved in government decision-making. Amber signs, on the third floor, are devoted to the theoretical literature of the American intelligence community, and this community's relationship with the executive and legislative branches of government. A more lyrical note is provided by American poet Henri Cole, whose recent work 'To the Forty-third President' appears in English and German on the first floor blue sign array; and again on the Museum's ground floor, translated into German and inscribed on a diagonally displayed log.

For Holzer's companion installation at the Johanniterkirche Feldkirch , the poem is branded in English, spiraling down a bare vertical tree trunk.

12 I 06 I 04 - 05 I 09 I 2004
Opening: 11 I 06 I 20 Uhr

For more than 25 years, Jenny Holzer's work has rivaled ignorance and violence with humor, kindness and, moral courage. Her astringent ideas, arguments, and sorrows have appeared in public places and international exhibitions, including the Venice Biennial, the Reichstag, and the Guggenheim Museums in New York and Bilbao. Whether the medium is a t-shirt, plaque, LED sign, or xenon projected on a prominent façade, the public dimension is an integral aspect of her work. Holzer lives in Hoosick, NY.

Henri Cole is the author of five collections of poetry, most recently 'Middle Earth'which received the prestigious Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award earlier this year. He has taught at Harvard, Yale, Columbia, and Bennington College, and has been described by critic Harold Bloom as a 'central poet of his generation.'Cole lives in Boston, MA.

TRUTH BEFORE POWER, the title of the exhibition, is taken from a 1968 essay, 'Estimates and Influence,' by Sherman Kent, one of the CIA's founders and leading thinkers. 'I suppose that if we in intelligence were one day given three wishes,'Kent mused, 'they would be to know everything, to be believed when we spoke, and in such a way to exercise an influence to the good in the matter of policy.'

Image:
Xenon for Bregenz 2004
(Rendering)
Text: To the Forty-third President
by Henri Cole

Kunsthaus Bregenz
Karl Tizian Platz A-6900
Bregenz

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JENNY HOLZER
Johanniterkirche Feldkirch
14 I 06 I 04 - 05 I 09 I 2004

As a companion piece to her installation in the lobby of the Kunsthaus, Holzer will place a monumental, text-branded tree in the nave of the Johanniterkirche Feldkirch. Referencing Trajan's Column, the text – presented in English in the church and in German in the Kunsthaus lobby – will spiral the length of the trees. In the Johanniterkirche, the tree column will be centered beneath Florus Scheel's ceiling fresco in the crossing of the nave and the side chapels. The tree, placed in the midst of excavated graves, will be positioned on the church's uneven earthen floor.

Holzer's installation in the Johanniterkirche is the most recent project in the collaboration, established in 2001, between the church and Kunsthaus Bregenz.

Opening hours
Johanniterkirche Feldkirch
Tu – Fr: 10 a.m. – 12 noon,1 – 6 p.m.
Th: 10 a.m. – 12 noon,1 – 9 p.m.
Sa: 9 a.m. – 4 p.m.
Su: 10 a.m. – 6 p.m.

Johanniterkirche
Marktgasse
A-6800 Feldkirch
Phone (+43-5522) 3 04 12 72

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