Heimrad Baecker
Sabine Bitter
Helmut Weber
Gunter Brus
Heinz Cibulka
Georgia Creimer
Peter Dressler
Valie Export
Rita Fabsits
Seiichi Furuya
Gelatin
G.R.A.M.
Ernst Haas
Maria Hahnenkamp
Ilse Haider
Raoul Hausmann
Matthias Herrmann
Tamara Horakova
Ewald Maurer
Dieter Huber
Franz Hubmann
Helmut Kandl
Leo Kandl
Herwig Kempinger
Aglaia Konrad
Elke Krystufek
Friedl Kubelka-Bondy
Wolfgang Kudrnofsky
Hans Kupelwieser
Paul Albert Leitner
Branko Lenart
Erich Lessing
Ulrike Lienbacher
Michael Mauracher
Inge Morath
Otto Muehl
Hermann Nitsch
Friederike Pezold
Cora Pongracz
Arnulf Rainer
Lois Renner
Gerhard Ruhm
Alfons Schilling
Markus Schinwald
Eva Schlegel
Michael Schuster
Rudolf Schwarzkogler
Gunther Selichar
Margherita Spiluttini
Octavian Trauttmansdorff
Peter Weibel
Manfred Willmann
Eva Wohlgemuth
Erwin Wurm
Gregor Zivic
Urs Stahel
The enormous range covered by Austrian photography from 1950 to the present day is reflected in the collections of the Federal Chancellery and the Austrian Photogallery in the Museum der Moderne in Salzburg. Among others with works by Arnulf Rainer, Gunter Brus, Hermann Nitsch, Valie Export, Eva Schlegel, Maria Hahnenkamp, Matthias Herrmann, Inge Morath, Peter Weibel, G.R.A.M., Erwin Wurm, Markus Schinwald. Curated by Urs Stahel.
Two Collections of Austrian Photography
From the Collections of the Federal Chancellery and the Museum der Moderne Salzburg
Among others with works by Arnulf Rainer, Gunter Brus, Rudolf Schwarzkogler,
Otto Muehl, Hermann Nitsch, Valie Export, Eva Schlegel, Maria Hahnenkamp,
Elke Krystufek, Matthias Herrmann, Peter Weibel, Gunther Selichar, Tamara
Hora'kova'/Ewald Maurer, Herwig Kempinger, Michael Schuster, Lois Renner,
Gregor Zivic, G.R.A.M., Peter Dressler, Paul Albert Leitner, Erwin Wurm,
Markus Schinwald, Leo Kandl, Manfred Willmann, Aglaia Konrad, Sabine
Bitter/Helmut Weber.
The curator is Urs Stahel.
The four cornerstones of Austrian photography since the 1950s have been,
firstly, the gradual emergence of a self-analysis verging on deep
psychology, spawned by the often physical struggle of Wiener Aktionismus to
explore issues of identity; secondly, a distinct tendency towards visual
puns in a rigorous yet playful approach to the question of defining an image
that appears to reflect the Austrian love of wordplay in literature and
philosophy; thirdly, and unsurprisingly, an unmistakable affinity to all
things theatrical, with a striking number of works that are staged or
involve acting out a scene in front of the camera; and finally, an intense
and densely woven documentation of Austria and the Austrians, forming a
complex and critical examination of the nation’s social fabric. The enormous
range covered by Austrian photography from 1950 to the present day is
reflected in the collections of the Federal Chancellery and the Austrian
Photogallery in the Museum der Moderne in Salzburg.
The exhibition is accompanied by a comprehensive catalogue.
The exhibition was primarily compiled for the Museum der Moderne in
Salzburg. A new selection will be made for the Fotomuseum Winterthur.
With the support of the Bundeskanzleramtes, Kunstsektion, Vienna, and the Bank Gutmann, Vienna.
Image: Gunter Brus, From the series Viennese Walk, 1965. Gelatin-silver print, 39,2 x 39,4 cm. Museum der Moderne Salzburg (c) Gunter Brus
Vernissage, December 1st 2006, h 6-9pm
Fotomuseum Winterthur
Gruzenstrasse 44 + 45 CH-8400 Winterthur (Zurich)
Opening hours of the exhibitions:
Tuesday to Sunday 11 a.m. - 6 p.m., Wednesday 11 a.m. to 8 p.m., closed on Mondays
Opening hours and holidays:
New Years Day closed; Good Friday closed; Ascension Day, Whitsun, Whit Monday and August 1, open; Christmas: Dec. 24 open until 4 p.m.; Dec. 25 closed; Dec. 26 regular opening hours; New Year`s Eve open until 4 p.m.