Posts mit dem Label Quilt werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label Quilt werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

Donnerstag, 27. Oktober 2022

MIT DER TÜR INS HAUS FALLEN

NEU­ER­WER­BUNGEN DER SAMM­LUNG DES BUNDES

11. November 2022 bis 12. Februar 2023

Die Ausstellung versammelt rund 50 Werke der Neuerwerbungen der Sammlung des Bundes. Die ausgewählten Arbeiten wurden in den letzten fünf Jahren ange­kauft und ermöglichen einen Überblick über das zeitgenössische Kunstgeschehen in Deutschland. Sie kreisen um Themen wie Kriegs- und Nachkriegszeit, Wieder­vereinigung, Migration und Identität, Europa, Rassismus und Freiheit.




GESPRÄCH DO 19.01.2023, 19 UHR

QUEERE QUILTS UND ALTERNATIVE ARCHIVE

DER KÜNSTLER PHILIPP GUFLER IM GESPRÄCH MIT MARIAN WILD
Das Gespräch dringt ein in die Idee einer queeren Kultur- und Kunstgeschichte, in Philipp Guflers künstlerischen Ansatz und aktuelle gesellschaftliche Fragen zu Kultur, Politik und (queerer) Identität.
Eintritt: 4 Euro.


Staatliches Museum für Kunst und Design Nürnberg
Klarissenplatz


Foto: Neues Museum (Annette Kradisch)

Sonntag, 1. Mai 2022

„IDENTITÄT NICHT NACHGEWIESEN“ NEUERWERBUNGEN DER SAMMLUNG DES BUNDES

7. Mai bis 3. Oktober 2022

Die Bundeskunsthalle zeigt regelmäßig Ausstellungen mit Werken aus der Sammlung des Bundes. Diese präsentiert eine Auswahl von etwa 170 Arbeiten, die innerhalb der fünfjährigen Tätigkeit (2017–2021) von der Fachkommission angekauft worden sind sowie Werke, die mit Mitteln von NEUSTART KULTUR (2020–2021) von einer erweiterten Kommission erworben wurden. Die Durchmischung der beiden Ankaufskonvolute verspricht eine größtmögliche Aktualität und einen repräsentativen Querschnitt der zeitgenössischen, mitunter auch sehr jungen Produktion.

Das kuratorische Konzept wurde mit einem Team aus Mitgliedern der Ankaufskommissionen entwickelt, und schon der gewählte Titel der Ausstellung, ein Werkzitat, verweist auf den Anspruch, der an die Werkauswahl gestellt wurde: Diversität, Toleranz und gesellschaftliche und persönliche Hinterfragungen sind Kriterien, nach denen die Werke ausgesucht worden sind. Für die dialogische Konzeption waren außerdem Themen wie zeitgenössische politische und gesellschaftliche Relevanz, postkolonialer Diskurs, Posthumanität, Geschichtskonstruktionen, Urbanität oder auch eine werkimmanente Bildästhetik maßgeblich. Die Ausstellung trägt der im zeitgenössischen Kontext relevanten Sammlung des Bundes Rechnung und veranschaulicht, wie historische und aktuelle Entwicklungen, kollektive Sehgewohnheiten oder Hinterfragungen von Bildkonstruktionen künstlerisch und modellhaft umgesetzt werden. Die Auswahl der Werke belegt zudem, dass die gegenwärtigen künstlerischen Ausdrucksformen eine breite Palette an Techniken und Medien umfassen – von raumgreifenden Installationen, Zeichnung, Malerei und Skulptur bis hin zu Fotografie und Videoarbeiten.

Sammlung zeitgenössische Kunst der Bundesrepublik Deutschland
Ankäufe von 2017 bis 2021 und Ankäufe NEUSTART KULTUR von 2020 bis 2021

Eine Ausstellung der Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland in Zusammenarbeit mit der Beauftragten der Bundesregierung für Kultur und Medien (BKM).

Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland GmbH
Museumsmeile Bonn
Helmut-Kohl-Allee 4
53113 Bonn

Donnerstag, 7. Oktober 2021

Actually, the Dead Are Not Dead. Techniques of Becoming



October 16, 2021 – January 23, 2022

Artists
Daniel G. Andújar, Banu Cennetoglu, Kate Crawford / Vladan Joler, Thirza Cuthand, Anna Dasovic, Laressa Dickey, Eva Egermann, Magdalena Freudenschuss, Robert Gabris, Ali Gharavi, Niklas Goldbach, Philipp Gufler, Jan Peter Hammer, Minna Henriksson, Che-Yu Hsu, Nina Støttrup Larsen, Yunyop Lee, Alice Lex-Nerlinger, Suntag Noh, Jo Spence, P. Staff, peter steudtner, Sunaura Taylor, Romily Alice Walden, Emma Wolukau-Wanambwa, Workers' Families Seeking Justice (WFSJ) and its Support Group

Curators
Hans D. Christ, Iris Dressler, Viktor Neumann

Techniques of Becoming is the third and last part of the exhibition series Actually, the Dead Are Not Dead, which was conceived in turn as a continuation of the Bergen Assembly 2019, a triennial for contemporary art in Norway.

Following the revolt of the bodies and the political dimensions of the festival, the third part revolves on the effects and dynamics of infrastructures. The exhibition explores the institutions, networks, architectures, and logistics both of materialized and immaterial nature, with regard to their entangled relations with the prevailing neoliberal and neocolonial power structures.

In addition to the museum, the school, the clinic, or the prison— those classical institutions of biopower that philosopher Michel Foucault investigated extensively and consequently has influenced generations if thinkers and artists—the exhibition focuses on infrastructures that enable the global circulation and administration of commodities, currencies, affects, and discourses: social media, computer games, and other systems of so-called smart technologies. It probes how these institutions and systems are entangled with structural forms of sexism, racism, pathologization, violence against non-normative and more-than-human bodies, and capitalist extractivsm of recources and living beings.

The show further reflects on the historical contexts of classifying, normalizing, and excluding forms of governing, looking into their histories from the emergence of modern nation-states to the establishment of globally and digitally active economies. The invited artists counter these structures and their mechanisms of exclusion, pathologization, and oppression with aesthetic and activist practices of appropriation, empowerment, and transformation. The philosopher Gilles Deleuze described the act of becoming as a polymorphic and constant process of change and of the affirmation of difference. In this sense, the artists negotiate becoming as site of possibilities and as a technique for exercising autonomy over one’s own body, for the development of structures of mutual support and for the formation of counter-publics.


Saturday, October 30, 2021, 6 p.m.

Philipp Gufler, Quilts*

Lecture and film screenings on various queer and other protagonists from Philipp Gufler's Quilt series







Schlossplatz 2
D-70173 Stuttgart

Mittwoch, 1. September 2021

BfF #1

Biennale für Freiburg


10. September – 3. Oktober 2021

EINLADUNG ZUR ERÖFFNUNG
10.09.2021 / BfF #1
 
Alle Ausstellungsorte sind am Eröffnungstag von 12 bis 22 Uhr geöffnet.
Reden und Drinks ab 18 Uhr am BfF Besuchszentrum, Münsterplatz 6.

BETEILIGTE KÜNSTLER*INNEN UND BEITRAGENDE
Michel Auder mit Michael Stickrod in Kollaboration mit Julius Martin-Humpert, Maristella Witt, Ilja Zaharov und Franziska Rist; Patrizia Bach; Patricia Esquivias; Rahima Gambo und Kollaborierende; Thomas Geiger in Kollaboration mit Birgit Heidtke, Sévérine Kpoti, Oliver Matthes und Dietrich Roeschmann; Niklas Goldbach; Philipp Gufler; Markus Hanakam & Roswitha Schuller; Belinda Kazeem-Kamiński; Vika Kirchenbauer; Sarah Lehnerer mit Jackie Grassmann und Inka Meißner und Gastvorträgen von Keren Cytter und Johanna Hedva; Luiza Margan; Kriz Olbricht; Liesl Raff; Andreas von Ow; Young Boy Dancing Group; und weitere...

Weitere Informationen




Installationsansicht Biennale für Freiburg #1, Kunstverein Freiburg, 2021, Foto: Marc Doradzillo        

Zeki Müren - Das ausgestellte Leben (eine unautorisierte Biografie)

 



Zeki Müren – Das ausgestellte Leben

(Eine unautorisierte Biografie)

Opening

8 September 2021
18:00–22:00


Bettina Allamoda
Nuray Demir & Michael Annoff
BOSTACE
Philipp Gufler
Cihangir Gümüştürkmen
Gülbin Ünlü

Gürsoy Doğtaş
(Kurator und Mitglied der Maison Zeki Müren)



At
Lovaas Projects
Fürstenstrasse 6
80333 München







Fotos: Franzi Müller Schmidt (1, 2) und Kati Lovaas (3, 4)

Donnerstag, 8. April 2021

Medienpreis HIV/AIDS 2019/20

Philipp Gufler has been awarded with the Medienpreis HIV/AIDS 2019/20! The artist has been researching the AIDS crisis of the 1980s since 2013 in the self-organized Forum Queeres Archiv München. 2020 the artist book „Quilt #01 – #30“ about his silkscreen series was published by the Hammann von Mier Verlag.

 


 

Dienstag, 6. Oktober 2020

This week at San Serriffe: exhibition QUILT #01—#30 by Philipp Gufler



The artists’ book ‘Quilt #01 — #30’ presents an ongoing series of quilts –silkscreen printed fabrics– produced since 2013 by Philipp Gufler. By combining text and image, Philipp Gufler's series of works refer to artists, writers, LGBTIQ+ magazines and lost queer spaces, which are often omitted from the history books. The subjects that are central to Gufler’s quilts are closely related to his own artistic practice and interests, but also his personal life. For the occasion of this book presentation, three quilts by Gufler will be on display at San Serriffe. 

"Questioning heteronormative gender roles and gender identity is a thread that runs throughout Gufler’s practice as well as through the series of quilts, for example in Quilt #19, dedicated to Kirsten Nilsson (1931–2017). Born Karl Erick Böttcher in Brandenburg, they worked as a barber and costumier before finding their calling as a ‘female impersonator’ in drag bars in Munich, Berlin and Hamburg. In 1964 Nilsson underwent gender reassignment surgery in Casablanca, Morocco. The operation was extremely risky at the time and patients had to sign an agreement that if they did not survive their body would be cremated and their ashes would be scattered at sea.“ (Quote by Laurie Cluitmans, curator of contemporary art at the Centraal Museum in Utrecht, from Quilt #01 — #30)

From 1957 to 1963 Dutch writer Gerard Reve lived in the Oudezijds Achterburgwal 55 in Amsterdam and often visited the hidden catholic church Ons’ Lieve Heer op Solder. The texts on Quilt #30 (Gerard Reve) from 2019 are referring to his novels Nader tot U from 1966 and Lieve jongens from 1973. 

Quilt #24 (C.) is referring to a character from Guflers artist book ‘Indirect Contact’. In the publication historic figures and contemporaries of Gufler meet outside the boundaries of chronological order. He gives them an indirect voice in the form of appropriated fragments. The persona that links all 21 chapters is Jäcki, based on the protagonist from Hubert Fichte’s novels. Like Fichte, Gufler makes use of the character Jäcki as a screen as well as ambivalent Doppelgänger (who never fully becomes the alter ego). Rather than an identity produced through fixed ways of being, Jäcki explores the self through the constant destabilization of his own identity.



Philipp Gufler works spans various media including silkscreen prints on fabric and mirrors, artist books, performances and video installations. For the video installation ‘Projection on the Crisis (Gauweilereien in Munich)’ (2014) he began researching into the self-organized archive Forum Queeres Archiv München, of which Gufler has since become an active member. Philipp Gufler studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich and attended artist residencies De Ateliers, Amsterdam (2015-2017) and Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture, Maine, USA (2019). He published the artist books ‘Projektion auf die Krise’ (2014), ‘I Wanna Give You Devotion’ (2017), ‘Quilt #01-#30’ (2020) and ‘Lana Kaiser’ (2020) with Hammann Von Mier Verlag, Munich and ‘Indirect Contact’ (2017) with BQ, Berlin.

The publication „Quilt #01–#30“ was published by Hammann von Mier Verlag with the kind support by Centraal Museum Utrecht, LfA Förderbank Bayern, Mondriaan Fund, the public fund for visual art and cultural heritage, Stichting Stokroos and the galleries BQ, Berlin and Françoise Heitsch, Munich. San Serriffe wants to thank gallery BQ for the loan of the works on display. 

...

San Serriffe is open weekly

Thu, Fri, Sat: 1—7 pm

Sun: 1—5 pm


San Serriffe

Sint Annenstraat 30

1012HE Amsterdam

The Netherlands

www.san-serriffe.com

Freitag, 25. September 2020

Koninklijke Prijs voor Vrije Schilderkunst 2020

De volgende kunstenaars zijn genomineerd voor de Koninklijke Prijs voor Vrije Schilderkunst 2020:

Rinella Alfonso, Maxime Favre, Philipp Gufler, Danielle Hoogendoorn, Matthijs Jeuring, Sophie Lee, Janne Schipper, Leonie Schneider, Benine du Toit, Wouter Venema, Charlott Weise, Lotte Wieringa, Aafke Ytsma, Iriée Zamblé en Dan Zhu.


Koninklijk Paleis
Nieuwezijds Voorburgwal 147, 1012 RJ Amsterdam

Sonntag, 23. August 2020

Autoerotismus

 



AUTOEROTISMUS

Exhibition: 9.9 – 11.10.2020
Opening: Tuesday, 8.9.2020, 5 – 9 PM



If one follows Lu Märten, a feminist writer and theorist, who started publishing articles on socialism, literature, land reform, women’s rights and art in 1902, it is the provision of art history to assemble an ever-expanding gallery of losses. It catalogues a history of forms lost for life. Philipp Gufler’s work, for all its ancestral halls, all its symbolic ovations and all its historical reference points, does no such thing. Ever. Rather, he reintroduces lives in art, isolating and intensifying pleasure points that did cross paths with art’s modern history but did withhold allegiance. For a very simple reason: “The complex body-fantasy is capable of much higher differentiation to the point of sophistry than positive art and humanities would have us believe to this day ... and not only the future of art and philosophy depends on whether we finally come down to it.”1 These are the words of Peter Gorsen, one of Gufler’s subjects, written in an essay on art he contributed to Armand Mergen’s “Sexualforschung. Stichwort und Bild”, published in Hamburg in 1962, with the support of Germany’s most influential sexual scientist, Hans Giese. The lexicon was a reworked version of the “Bilderlexikon der Erotik” that the Institute for Sexual Science in Vienna had brought out in ten volumes in the 1930s. One of its convictions had been to sideline the normalizing effects of psychoanalysis and counter them with a general pathology of pleasures. In distancing the field of sexuality from its (re)productive societal functions, and laying out a panorama of dysfunctionality in word and image, these two visual encyclopedias offered nothing less than an anthropological reorientation: the techniques, materials and appendages of a labor against reproduction. A labor of self-endangerment. A labor of desire. One could say that Philipp Gufler continues this work.

Gufler’s pieces in that sense are obituaries of living desires that stage a labor-history of pleasure. He invites subjects into it whose investment with artistic labor starts from what Giese calls “a partner-like relationship to oneself”2, at once a relation of alienation and communion. Gufler assembles these tipping points of metamorphosis of industrial illegibility. His mirroring metal sculptures, elementary forms, silkscreened with color palettes, perform an uncannily symbolic role within this scenario. They appear like blanks, windows, opened for pleasures yet unarticulated. Most of them seem to suggest a possible use value, future trays and mirrors of interiors populated by … us? An offer of consumption. Victor Vasarely, whose moldering museum in Aix-en-Provence served as the stage for Gufler’s film “The Responsive Body”, another one of Gufler’s subjects, offered just that in order to locate its excess within the beholder, “exceeding the optical adaptation limits" in which "the required vision becomes the sensation of pain"3. The pain of interrupted self-regeneration here is externalized into the public sphere. And it is pain in its changing forms which Gufler takes seriously as artistic form, exchanging narrations of tormented interiorities, with those of a “partner-like relationship to oneself” within a world of perversion. As Henri Nouveau, the person Giese addresses here without ever naming him, in one of his diary entries “after thirty years of permanent self-analysis and observation”, resumes: “it would be incorrect to call my life wrong, because it is based on irreal ideas; wrong was only that I was looking for reality, desired fulfillment.“4 The deadly hardship of feeling an unmodern life amidst modernity’s triumphal rage—Nouveau wrote this on January 13th 1945—finds itself in the tiniest corner, immersed in a labor of self-invigoration and -consumption. But these are the niches that Gufler opens up anew, that he turns into sequential halls, that he refuses to surrender to the reified exceptionalisms of art history. And here, Märten returns. Her major work “Wesen und Veränderung der Formen / Künste” of 1924 was dedicated studying to “the origin of forms — today called art — (and it) shows that there were no art conceptions and ideas in these beginnings. The forms originate from important life purposes; they are means to achieve them. Their primitive as well as their consummated type comes from a common source – labor.”5 The labor Gufler presents is that of “Autoerotismus”, a labor up for expansion, for communizations, for desires shared as forms of a life that does to offer a utopian outlook, but a “much higher differentiation to the point of sophistry”, a life of forms prepared to redirect its external relations, open to “register: what a spook the day brings…"6

Text by Kerstin Stakemeier


1 Peter Gorsen, Kunst (moderne, bildende) in: Armand Mergen (Hg.), Sexualforschung – Stich- Wort und Bild, Band I und II,Wien, Leipzig, 1963, S.447-516, hier S. 516 Institut für Sexualforschung Wien (Hg.), Bil- der-Lexikon der Erotik, Band I bis X, Wien/ Leipzig 1938. „Der Komplex Leib-Phantasie ist ungleich höherer Differenzierung bis zur Spitzfindigkeit fähig, als positive Kunst und Geisteswissenschaften es ihr bis heute zutrauen … und nicht nur die Zukunft der Kunst und Philosophie hängt davon ab, ob wir uns endlich zu ihr herablassen.“

2 Einführung von Hans Giese, zu Jürg Hansen, Abstraktion vom sinnlichen Erleben (Der Weg eines Malers), in: Hans Giese, Jürg Hansen, Wilfried Rasch (Hrsg.), Psychiatrische Beiträge zur modernen Kunst, Ferdinand Enke Verlag Stuttgart, 1967, S.15 „eine partnerhafte Beziehung zu sich selbst“

3 Peter Gorsen, »Transformierte Alltäglichkeit oder Transzendenz der Kunst«, in: Chris Bezzel, Peter Brückner, Gisela Dischner, Peter Gorsen, Alfred Krvoza, Gabriele Ricke, Alfred Sohn-Rethel u.a., Das Unvermögen der Realität. Beiträge zu einer anderen materialistischen Ästhetik, Berlin, 1974, S. 153, FN 25 “Überschreitung der optischen Adaptionsgrenzen” in der “das geforderte Sehen zur Schmerzempfindung” wird.

4 „es wäre unrichtig mein Leben falsch zu nennen, weil es auf irreellen Vorstellungen basiert; falsch war nur, daß ich Realität suchte, Erfüllung wünschte, Giese, Einführung, S. 21.

5 Lu Märten, Wesen und Veränderung der Formen/Künste. Resultate historisch materialistischer Untersuchungen, Frankfurt am Main, 1924, S.286. „Das Resultat der Untersuchung über die Entstehung der Formen – heute Kunst genannt, ergibt, daß es keine Kunstvorstellungen und Ideen in diesen Anfängen gab. Die Formen entstammen wichtigen Lebenszwecken; sie sind Mittel, diese zu erreichen. Ihre primitive wie vollendete Art entstammt der gemeinsamen Quelle – der Arbeit.“

6 Giese, Einführung, S.21. Beobachten: was für einen Spuk der Tag zuträgt



KEVIN SPACE
Volkertplatz 13
AT-1020 Vienna
















Photos: Maximilian Anelli-Monti

Mittwoch, 12. Februar 2020

FLUIDITY


LOREN BRITTON
CASSILS
SHU LEA CHEANG 
ZACKARY DRUCKER
ALICIA FRANKOVICH 
PHILIPP GUFLER
MARYNA MAKARENKO 
TEJAL SHAH
MING WONG

23. Februar – 17. Mai 2020
Kuratiert von Dr. Alejandro Perdomo Daniels
Eröffnung: 22. Februar 2020 um 19 Uhr

Syker Vorwerk – Zentrum für zeitgenössische Kunst
Öffnungszeiten: Mi 15–19, Sa 14–18, So/Feiertag 11–18 Uhr





Donnerstag, 23. Januar 2020

Quilt #01–#03


Philipp Gufler: Quilt #01–#30


16,5 cm x 29,7 cm
208 pages, Softcover
Text by Laurie Cluitmans 
Language: German / English
1st Edition: 700
Editor / Concept: Philipp Gufler
Design: Stefanie Hammann

Quilt #01-#30 is published by Hammann Von Mier Verlag, Munich, with kind support by Centraal Museum Utrecht, LfA Förderbank Bayern, Mondriaan Fund, Stichting Stokroos and the galleries BQ, Berlin and Françoise Heitsch, Munich.


Order here: Hammann Von Mier 


Book presentations:


Centraal Museum, Utrecht

Thursday, February 6 2020, 6 pm
with an artist talk with Bart Rutten


BQ, Berlin

Thursday, February 27 2020, 7 pm
as part of the exhibition "It is getting alive

Sonntag, 12. Januar 2020

Andere Geschiedenis volgens Dirkje Kuik en Philipp Gufler

Quilt #29 (Dirkje Kuik), 2019

Andere Geschiedenis volgens Dirkje Kuik en Philipp Gufler

18 January – 7 June 2020 


Het Centraal Museum Utrecht laat in een nieuwe duotentoonstelling in de ruimte Utrecht Lokaal een selectie werken zien van Dirkje Kuik en Philipp Gufler. In Andere Geschiedenis volgens Dirkje Kuik en Philipp Gufler worden van Dirkje Kuik volop tekeningen, etsen, litho’s en schilderijen met Utrecht als inspiratiebron getoond. In opdracht van het museum heeft de Duitse kunstenaar Philipp Gufler (Augsburg, 1989) een Quilt – een gezeefdrukt doek – gemaakt. Deze maakt onderdeel uit van een serie waarin Gufler kunstenaars, schrijvers, LHBTQI+ tijdschrift en verdwenen queer plekken verbeeldt, zoals Johann Joachim Winckelmann, Wies Smals en Die Freundin. Deze Quilts zullen te zien zijn in de tentoonstelling.

Op donderdag 6 februari gaat Philipp Gufler in gesprek met Bart Rutten om zijn nieuwe boek “Quilt #01-#30” (Hammann Von Mier Verlag, München) te presenteren in het museum.

Agnietenstraat 1 
3512 XA Utrecht
Netherlands








Fotos: © Centraal Museum Utrecht / Jan Kees Steenman and courtesy of BQ, Berlin, Roman März, Berlin

Dienstag, 10. Dezember 2019

It is getting alive



Philipp Gufler: IT IS GETTING ALIVE


Eröffnung Freitag 10.1.20120, 18–21 Uhr
Ausstellung 11.1. – 29.2.2020


BQ
WeydingerstraSSe 10
1018 Berlin
Di– Sa 11–18 Uhr


On Thursday February 27, 2020 at 7 pm Philipp Guflers new artist book Quilt #01 – #30 will be presented at BQ. The book is published by Hammann Von Mier Verlag, Munich.







Foto: Roman März, Berlin

Montag, 23. September 2019

Liebe und Ethnologie / Love and Ethnology

Liebe und Ethnologie



Philipp Gufler, Quilt #01 (Hubert Fichte) mit Adrian Djukic, 2013



Die koloniale Dialektik der Empfindlichkeit (nach Hubert Fichte)

18.10.2019–06.01.2020


Can the ethnographic gaze be “given back”, restituted? Within the context of ethnology and the aesthetic avant-garde of post-war West Germany, the exhibition examines Hubert Fichte’s writing and takes it as the starting point for new artistic works on questions of representation and restitution, dissolution of boundaries and canonization, and updating colonial power relations.

The German writer Hubert Fichte (1935-1986) was fascinated by arts and religions of the African diaspora. In the 1970s, he travelled cities like Salvador da Bahia and Rio de Janeiro, Santiago de Chile, Dakar, New York and Lisbon, developing his utopia of a radical sensitivity. This sensitivity would serve research alongside intense interviews, intimacy through (gay) sexuality, self-reflexivity, and a condensed poetry of objectivity. Fichte’s experiments with dialogical forms of writing were incorporated in his monumental, unfinished cycle of novels Die Geschichte der Empfindlichkeit (The History of Sensitivity).

The exhibition and research project in cooperation with the Goethe-Institut, Hubert Fichte: Love and Ethnology, opens these works for a critical contemporary discussion. Since 2017, selected novels have been translated into Portuguese, English, French, Spanish and Wolof. For the first time, this stimulated a reception of Fichte’s writings in the places of their creation. Exhibitions curated on-site showed new artistic works. The concluding Berlin exhibition Love and Ethnology – The Colonial Dialectic of Sensitivity (after Hubert Fichte) gathers these inverted gazes and presents them against the backdrop of ethnology and the aesthetic avant-garde of post-war West Germany.

With extensive archival materials and artistic works by Nadja Abt, Heriberto “Eddie” Alicea, Kader Attia, Gilles Aubry, Richard Avedon, Alvin Baltrop, Gabriel Barbi, Letícia Barreto, Coletivo Bonobando, Papisto Boy, Michael Buthe, Miguel Rio Branco, Rosemarie Clausen, Nathalie David, Mestre Didi, Hubert Fichte, Claudia del Fierro, Avril Forest, Alair Gomes, Renée Green, Philipp Gufler, Ayrson Heráclito, Isaac Julien, Euridice Zaituna Kala, Kippenberger und Akim S. aus 44, Friedl Kubelka, Pedro Lemebel, Cristóbal Lehyt, Musa Michelle Mattiuzzi, Leonore Mau, Tiona Nekkia McClodden, Virginia de Medeiros, Michaela Melián, Mario Navarro, Richard Oelze, Pan African Space Station, Lil Picard, André Pierre, Lili Reynaud-Dewar, Daniel Richter, Thierno Seydou Sall, Pierre Verger, James Van der Zee and others.

Curated by Diedrich Diederichsen and Anselm Franke



Conference:
Samstag, 19. Oktober 2019, 19h
Ästhetik des Faktischen: Poesie und Journalismus 
/Moderiert von Diedrich Diederichsen (online)


Haus der Kulturen der Welt

John-Foster-Dulles-Allee 10
10557 Berlin
hkw.de


© Laura Fiorio / HKW, 2019

Montag, 20. August 2018

All’estero & Dr. K.’s Badereise nach Riva: Version B



Marc Camille Chaimowicz, Whitney Claflin, Oliver Croy and Oliver Elser, Stephan Dillemuth, Georgia Gardner Gray, Rochelle Goldberg, Philipp Gufler, Ernst Herbeck, Tess Jaray, Martin Kippenberger, Nick Mauss, Marina Sula, Mark Van Yetter, Dario Wokurka, Miriam Yammad

curated by_Saim Demircan


13. 9. – 27. 10. 2018


Croy Nielsen
Parkring 4, 1010 Vienna, Austria, +43 676 6530074, info@croynielsen.com
Wednesday – Friday: 12:00 – 18:00, Saturday: 11:00 – 15:00


Abbildung: WG Sebald / Michael Brandon-Jones, ​‘Schwindel. Gefühle’, sequence, 35mm Film Negative, 1989. Courtesy of WG Sebald Photographic Collection. Department of Art History, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK.




"Dopplung. Empfindlichkeit.", 2018