30 % Dandelion

Press release

19.03.2026

Image Credits

Duration

21.03. - 08.11.2026

Opening

20.03.2026 6pm

Press event

19.03.2026 11am - 12pm

Place of the press event

Kunsthaus Graz, Needle

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The dandelion – as a flower, botanical plant, cultural symbol and aesthetic phenomenon – possesses strength and quiet courage. Unobtrusive yet persistent, it adapts radically, returns, and resists. Under the title 30% Dandelion, the exhibition at  Kunsthaus Graz brings together more than 35 works dedicated to the flower and its direct connection to humans: humans share 30% of their genetic material with the flower. In the works, we encounter the melancholy of a crumbling present. At the same time, they take us on a journey into the familiar, beautiful, and intoxicating aesthetics of the flower and its exuberant expression of vitality. The focus is on recurring arrival, symbiotic cooperation and farewell: poetic, political and ecological.

 

The dandelion serves both as a model of adaptive strength and as a language spoken by all. In the spirit of floriography – the historical language of flowers – it becomes a transcultural gesture of recognition and communication: overlooked, but persistent and beautiful. As a flower of the margins, meadows and gardens, it offers a symbolic vocabulary that resists normative constraints, speaks in everyday languages, possesses healing powers and, in the radiant colour of the sun, entices the insects that fertilise it. The exhibition is based on the concept of ‘entanglements’ as well as on philosophical and ecological framework concepts of ‘aesthetic offering’ (Elaine Scarry) and ‘critical hybridity’ – and is also linked to the exhibition on the upper floor, Hybrid Pleasures. Helen Chadwick supported by Liesl Raff – in which the productive and provocative forms of a polyphonic hybridity become the subject. The ‘entanglements’ are, as formulated by thinkers such as Donna Haraway, Karen Barad and Timothy Morton, just as politically and colonially charged as they are cross-genre, cross-gender and intrinsically seen. When Haraway writes, ‘We will be together or not at all,’ it is important to trace the connections and use the insights for a just future.

 

Amidst ecological crises, colonial aftermaths and digital acceleration, 30% Dandelion calls for new forms of attention – attuned to what grows slowly, demands time and returns quietly. The flower, but also the dandelion with its spreading seeds, its natural healing power and its communal flourishing, embodies this principle of an ethical way of life based on coexistence.

 

With i. a. Iris Andraschek, Suzanne Anker, Karl Blossfeldt, Andrea Bowers, Viltė Bražiūnaitė & Tomas Sinkevičius, Claude Cahun, Regula Dettwiler, Spencer Finch, Barbara Frischmuth, Anita Fuchs, Yevhen Holubentsev, Sanja Iveković, Anna Jermolaewa, Markus Jeschaunig, Claudia Larcher, Jonas Mekas, Joiri Minaya, Ryts Monet, Alois Neuhold, Agnieszka Polska, Anna Ridler, Ugo Rondinone, Martha Rosler, Sonya Schönberger, Nina Schuiki, Elfie Semotan, Petr Štembera, Alexander Stern, Thomas Stimm, Michael Stusser, Neja Tomšič, Dirck van Rijswijk, Anna Zemánková and further loans from collections such as cultural history, natural sciences or literature, the exhibition unfolds as a polyphonic exploration of the flower, its attribution and power of attraction.

 

The project is part of the collaborative project BLOOM, which will connect the locations of the Universalmuseum Joanneum from spring to winter 2026.

Images

Joiri Minaya, Shield, 2022

© Joiri Minaya

Claudia Larcher, Still Life 3000, No09, 2023-2024

Courtesy der Künstlerin © Bildrecht, Wien 2026

Suzanne-Anker, When Crystals spawn Flower, 2023

Courtesy of the artist

Agnieszka Polska, "The Book of Flowers", 2024, Videostill

Courtesy der Künstlerin

Anita Fuchs, "Ein Stilleben Aus dem Hier und Jetzt", Kartierung, Kunsthaus Graz, 2025

Foto: Clemens Nestroy © Bildrecht, Wien 2026

Anna Jermolaewa, "The Penultimate", 2017

Courtesy der Künstlerin © Bildrecht, Wien 2026

Barbara Frischmuth, "Schaufel, Rechen, Gartenschere", 2023

Courtesy der Künstlerin

Jonas Mekas, "Requiem", 2019, Videostill

Courtesy of Jonas Mekas Estate

Sonya Schönberger, "Aldi", Fotoserie "Kenyan Roses for the Kingdom", 2019

© Sonya Schönberger

Viltė Bražiūnaitė & Tomas Sinkevičius, Sunflower, 2022, Videostill

Courtesy der Künstler*innen

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Publication is permitted exclusively in the context of announcements and reviews related tothe exhibition. Please avoid any cropping of the images. Thank you for crediting the photographs according to the enclosed indications.