UMJ Newsletter Aussendung.

The cooperation between Kunsthaus Graz and Muzej suvremene umjetnosti (MSU) focuses on works by artists who explore the relationship between body and identity

05.06.2023

The exhibition is based on a curatorial exchange programme between Muzej suvremene umjetnosti (MSU) Zagreb and Kunsthaus Graz. Delayed by the pandemic and postponed several times as a result, Body and Territory: Art and Borders in Today’s Austria opened at MSU Zagreb in early December 2022. The exhibition brings together around 100 works that demonstrate – according to the theory of curators Jasna Jakšić and Radmila Iva Janković – two prevailing tendencies that continue to shape contemporary art in Austria today: radical performance and feminist legacy.

Katia Huemer (curator, Kunsthaus Graz), Andreja Hribernik (Head of Kunsthaus Graz) and Jasna Jakšić (curator, MSU Zagreb), photo: Kunsthaus Graz/J.J. Kucek

At Kunsthaus Graz, the exhibition is expanded by adding positions from the former area of Yugoslavia and the idea of considering artistic developments in the ‘land in between’ (as the historian and art historian Nena Dimitrijevic described the SFR Yugoslavia) from an outside perspective through the focus of the thematic cornerstones of body and territory. The art scene in Yugoslavia after the Second World War was shaped by the attempt to develop a distinct language, yet at the same time to correspond with art developments in the West. In the specific territory that we now call the former Yugoslavia, art movements emerged in a different social, political and economic environment from that of the West, a development that was determined, for example, by – at best – toleration on the part of politics, as well as the lack of the art market. In the late 1960s and 1970s, when a mood of democratic awakening reigned almost all over the world – also inspiring young people in Yugoslavia to fight for liberal values – tendencies towards the politicisation and socialisation of art were emerging that can certainly be compared to those in Austria, even if they were also under different circumstances.

The exhibition covers a period of over five decades. Time and again, it is a question of identity. How does it come into being, how does it inscribe itself on the body, and how can it be overcome? Exhibition view: J.J. Kucek

Ranging from the 1960s to the present, the selection of works highlights changes in how identity is inscribed in our bodies, and how the body is able to overcome the identity projected onto it. The historical works in the show illustrate how the vulnerability of the body, which emerged as a dominant theme in Austrian art at the beginning of the 20th century, became the main medium of radical forms of political resistance in the late 1960s. The regulation of the body, together with its resistance to classifications and categories, is also the theme of a number of more recent works in the exhibition. What role does the body still play in art today? What is its underlying social meaning? What is the appeal of bodily acts of transformation and the border crossings that have always been a characteristic part of identity formation?

 

Body and Territory is to be understood as a dialogue between neighbours, in which connecting elements of artistic practices around the themes of body and identity are made visible.  

 

With works by Marina Abramović, Josef Bauer, Anna Brus, Günter Brus, CLUB FORTUNA, Lea Culetto, Josef Dabernig, Katrina Daschner, Vlasta Delimar, Ines Doujak & John Barker, Ana Nuša Dragan, Srečo Dragan, VALIE EXPORT, Susanna Flock, Gelitin, Tomislav Gotovac, Igor Grubić, Skupina OHO, Marina Gržinić & Aina Šmid, Nilbar Güreş, Peter Gerwin Hoffmann, IRWIN, Sanja Iveković, Željko Jerman, Anna Jermolaewa, Birgit Jürgenssen, Richard Kriesche, Nina Kurtela, Katalin Ladik, Laibach, Luiza Margan, Marko Marković, Branko Milisković, F. J. Nestler-Rebeau, Friederike Pezold, Neli Ružić, Toni Schmale, Mladen Stilinović, Ingeborg Strobl, Slaven Tolj & Marija Grazio, Milica Tomić, Peter Weibel, Erwin Wurm, Vlasta Žanić.

 

 

 

_____________________

 

 

 

Body and Territory

Cross-border Dialogues
A cooperation with MSU Zagreb
Duration: 26.05.–27.08.2023

Curated by Katia Huemer (Kunsthaus Graz), Jasna Jakšić, Radmila Iva Janković (MSU Zagreb)

Venue: Kunsthaus Graz, Space02
Kunsthaus Graz, Lendkai 1, 8020 Graz, Austria

www.kunsthausgraz.at

 

 

 

 

More information and images for download are available under: Body and Territory

 

 

 

_____________________

 

 

 

 

We look forward to your reports and articles and will be happy to answer any questions!

 

Heritage Project ist ein bildhauerisches Langzeitprojekt, das sich der Konstruktion von Identität aus verschiedenen Perspektiven widmet. Es verpflichtet sich dabei konsequent bildhauerisch dem Handwerk und seinem intrinsischen Wissen, das droht verloren zu gehen und vergessen zu werden. Im Sinne einer Ästhetik der Moderne ist jedes bearbeitete Objekt in seiner eigenständigen Qualität und seinem Wert erkennbar. Als selbstbewusste, nachhaltige und begehrenswerte Manifestationen einer translokalen europäischen Baukultur, manifestieren sie sich als nachhaltiges Kulturerbe „für alle“.

 

 

Plamen Dejanoff (*1970 in Veliko Tarnovo und Sofia) lebt und arbeitet in Wien. Studium an der Akademie der bildenden Künste in Wien bei Michelangelo Pistoletto, davor an der Nationalen Kunstakademie in Sofia und am Pratt Institute in New York, zahlreiche Einzelausstellungen und Beteiligungen in Gruppenausstellungen.

 

 

_____________________

 

 

 

Plamen Dejanoff
Heritage Project

In Kooperation mit Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau und Bundesdenkmalamt – Informations- und Weiterbildungszentrum Baudenkmalpflege Kartause Mauerbach
Eröffnung: 07.06.2023, 19 Uhr
Laufzeit: 08.06.–27.08.2023
Kuratiert von Katrin Bucher Trantow
Ort: Kunsthaus Graz, Space01
 

 


_____________________

 

 

Bildmaterial zum Download, den ausführlichen Pressetext und Hintergrundinformation finden Sie im Pressebereich: Plamen Dejanoff

 

 

Kunsthaus Graz, Lendkai 1, 8020 Graz

www.kunsthausgraz.at

 

 

_____________________

 

 

 

 

Wir freuen uns auf Ihre Berichterstattung stehen für Rückfragen gerne zur Verfügung!

 

 

 

 

Herzliche Grüße

 

 

Daniela Teuschler
+43/664/8017-9214, daniela.teuschler@museum-joanneum.at

Stephanie Liebmann
+43/664/8017-9213, stephanie.liebmann@museum-joanneum.at

Eva Sappl
+43/699/1780-9002, eva.sappl@museum-joanneum.at