Follow us
Dalloul Art Foundation

Art/Histories

Last updated on Sat 26 July, 2014

Art/Histories Art/Histories

Art/Histories

26.07.2014 - 26.10.2014
Mönchsberg

In Art/Histories, an exhibition of 330 works by around forty artists that spans both buildings, the Museum der Moderne Salzburg presents multiple fresh perspectives on history and historic events.

How is history written, who is appointed to write it, and which tools do historians apply to the study and evaluation of historical events and the communication of their findings? How about the objectivity of scholarly research and the historic documents on which history is based? What legitimizes visual artists who bring their own resources and unique approaches to the exploration of themes in history and recent historic events in their work?

The first thematic exhibition under the aegis of the museum’s new appointed Director Sabine Breitwieser, initiates a debate over a central part of the institution’s mission: making history out of artifacts. Looking beyond the narrow confines of art history, it focuses on works with a specific frame of reference: art that reflects on history and contemporary events as well as its own involvement. With more than 330 works by around forty artists, the show spans the period from the seventeenth century to the present. It engages both the museum’s own and other local collections as well as a variety of perspectives and artistic practices, including the rules of the art world itself, in a dialogue. The exhibition thus presents art with distinctive views on history—and the artists behind it—in a larger historical framework and surveys its origins as well as its contemporary manifestations. As extensive as the theme is also the spatial presentation, which extends to both venues of the Museum der Moderne Salzburg—the Mönchsberg and the Rupertinum.

The scrupulous methodology of historiography has recently found itself confronted with a new emphasis on the immediate experience of events. In the last few years, this shift has led critics to raise numerous questions also concerning the role of the museum: Whose history is to be told, and from whose perspective? Whose task is it to tell it? And what form is the ongoing revision of traditional contents to take? A general consensus has emerged that art history should be read less as a linear succession of schools and tendencies spearheaded by individual protagonists than as a living network in which interrelations and meanings are subject to ongoing renegotiation.

Can artists be (critical) historians? Can they tell us something that we do not already know from the profusion of facts and views with which today’s media flood us? Or do we have reason to hope that they are simply “better” at telling us about “their” view of history and histories?

With works by Anonymus, Kader Attia, Elias Baeck, Lothar Baumgarten, Alfred Baumgartner, Heimrad Bäcker, Michael Blum, Marcel Broodthaers, Johann August Corvinus, Alice Creischer, Gerti Deutsch, Otto Dix, Stan Douglas, Harun Farocki, Omer Fast, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Simone Forti, Andrea Fraser, Andrea Geyer, Dan Graham, Renée Green, Ernst Haas, Jörg Immendorff / Felix Dröse, Jörg Immendorff, Sanja Iveković, Kurt Kaindl, Gülsün Karamustafa, Anselm Kiefer, Käthe Kollwitz, Christoph Lederwasch, Deimantas Narkevičius, Walid Raad / The Atlas Group, Elaine Reichek, Aura Rosenberg, Martha Rosler, Anri Sala, Andreas Siekmann, Wael Shawky, Chen Shaoxiong, Johann Conrad Stapff, Danh Vō, Lawrence Weiner, Akram Zaatari

Curator: Sabine Breitwieser, Direktorin; with Christina Penetsdorfer, Curatorial Assistant

Share
+-

Press

Art/Histories
Contemporary and, 2014

Related Artists and Artworks

Become a Member

Join us in our endless discovery of modern and contemporary Arab art


We value your privacy.
TermsCookiesPrivacy Policies