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"Arbeit essen angst": Kokerei Zollverein. (Essen).


More and more, art addresses the human and economic conditions of society. Since the G8 summit in Genoa Genoa (jĕn`ōwə), Ital. Genova, city (1991 pop. 678,771), capital of Genoa prov. and of Liguria, NW Italy, on the Ligurian Sea. , there have been efforts to formulate a viable basis for critiquing globalization globalization

Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation
 in cultural as well as economic terms. This trend remains unchanged by the events of September 11; indeed, the crisis of a world defined by economic dependencies has become all the more visible.

Up until the '90s, the building housing the Kokerei Zollverein was used to process coal. Then the factory closed, finally reopening last year as a venue for cultural activities. In addition to the newly founded Kunstverein, its extensive grounds house a stage for modem dance; concert halls and museum-style exhibition halls are also planned. For "Arbeit Essen Angst," twenty-seven artists from around the world were invited to cover the themes of work, leisure, and fear. Among the older works shown were Patricia Hearst A Thru Z, 1979-89, Dennis Adams's media-based study of representations of William Randolph William Randolph (1650 - April 11, 1711) was a colonist and land owner who played an important role in the history and politics of what became the U.S. state of Virginia.

He was born in Warwickshire, England, to Richard Randolph (1627-1671) and Elizabeth Ryland (1625-1670).
 Hearst's granddaughter; and Stephen Willats's photo-text research piece Vier Inseln in Berlin (Four islands in Berlin), 1980, about life in Berlin's high-rise developments. Olaf Metzel hung his installation Im Griinen (In the country), 1992, made of camping tents and camouflage netting--which formerly stood as a sharp commentary on the nonchalant non·cha·lant  
adj.
Seeming to be coolly unconcerned or indifferent. See Synonyms at cool.



[French, from Old French, present participle of nonchaloir, to be unconcerned : non-,
 reportage from the world's civil war zones--inside an open sha ftway, as a symbol for "leisure-park Germany."

But for the most part, "Arbeit Essen Angst" relied on artists in their twenties and thirties. Laura Horelli from Finland was last seen in the Venice Biennale Venice Biennale

International art exhibition held in the Castello district of Venice every two years and juried by an international committee. It was founded in 1895 as the International Exhibition of Art of the City of Venice to promote “the most noble activities of
, with photo collages of women in politics. Here she exhibited several videos on local residents: The viewer quickly notes that the protagonists' respective jobs--or unemployment--dominate their leisure activities too. The economy orders private life. Two Frankfurt artists, Dirk Paschke and Daniel Milohnic, translate this private sphere The private sphere is the complement or opposite of the public sphere. Heidegger argues that it is only in the private sphere that one can be one's authentic self.

See also privacy.
 back into public strategies. Because the city of Essen had closed its public pools for lack of funds, Paschke and Milohnic constructed one by welding freight containers together. Werksschwimmbad (Works swimming pool), 1996/2001, thematizes, qua sculpture, the same rededication Noun 1. rededication - a new dedication; "the rededication of the Temple of Jerusalem"
dedication - a ceremony in which something (as a building) is dedicated to some goal or purpose
 of industrial remnants to leisure services that the complex itself exemplifies. This shows how well constructive critique can function in a contextual framework.

Above all, the exhibition sought to develop viable viewpoints on the nature of work. For Tobias Rehberger's Sweatshop sweatshop: see sweating system. , 2001, each day the exhibition staff had to transpose trans·pose
v.
To transfer one tissue, organ, or part to the place of another.
 the designs of skulls and bright, neon-colored ornaments from his wall painting into knitting patterns for sweaters. Overseeing this transposition transposition /trans·po·si·tion/ (trans?po-zish´un)
1. displacement of a viscus to the opposite side.

2.
 thus became a part of the artistic procedure and referred to exploitation in other fields of work. Collaborating with local youth, Christine and Irene Hohenbuchler constructed a Kinder-Huttendorf (Children's cabin village), 2001. In the course of this intervention, the group of participants grew ever larger, as the fathers--most of whom were unemployed--started helping out with the project. Silke Wagner, too, shifted her mode of action to the concrete public realm with burgersteig (Pavement), 2001. She gave the local antifascistic and antiracist organizations the use of a small bus and used photography and video to document the different situations that arose. The result is reminiscent of an inde pendent media project beyond the pale of today's docusoaps and their high-tech aesthetic. For Wagner, art is not a seismograph but rather the very glue of reality.

Translated from German by Sara Ogger.
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Article Details
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Author:Fricke, Harald
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Jan 1, 2002
Words:549
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