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"Die Gewalt ist der Rand aller Dinge": Generali Foundation. (Vienna).


At the beginning of each year, the vestals Vestals

six pure girls; tended fire sacred to Vesta. [Rom. Hist.: Brewer Dictionary, 1127]

See : Virginity
 of the Austrian temple of Conceptual art conceptual art

Any of various art forms in which the idea for a work of art is considered more important than the finished product. The theory was explored by Marcel Duchamp from c. 1910, but the term was coined in the late 1950s by Edward Kienholz.
, the Generali Foundation The Generali Foundation was established in 1988 by the Generali Group Austria as a private and non-profit-making art association for the promotion of contemporary art. Situated in [Vienna], [Austria], it is one of the important museums specialised in collecting and exhibiting conceptual , surrender their austere chambers for the sake of experiment: an exhibition straight from the artists' laboratory. For 2002, Alice Creischer and Andreas Siekmann, artist-writers specializing in the political dimension of art, organized a show on the theme of artistic work and militancy: "Die Gewalt ist der Rand aller Dinge dinge  
n.
Grime or squalor; dinginess.



[Back-formation from dingy1.]

Noun 1.
" (Violence is at the margin of all things). Three questions assert themselves: How do artists treat the theme of militancy within their own system? What can aesthetic praxis accomplish? And how does it relate to classical understandings of the concepts of the real (politics) and the symbolic (art)?

As a historical reference, Creischer and Siekmann provided photographs of the Paris Commune of 1871: Fighters on the barricades and the toppled Vendome column inaugurate in·au·gu·rate  
tr.v. in·au·gu·rat·ed, in·au·gu·rat·ing, in·au·gu·rates
1. To induct into office by a formal ceremony.

2.
 the field of photojournalism as the democratic medium par excellence of the late nineteenth century. Links to Gustave Courbet, realism, and the rise of mechanical reproduction all enter into the canvases, postmodern in their effect, of Gerard Fromanger. For the two works from his 1975 series "Hommage a F. Topino-Lebrun," this French artist and activist reworked photographic documents of the murder of the revolutionary Gracchus Babeuf and of the riots in Toul, the prison made famous by Michel Foucault Michel Foucault (IPA pronunciation: [miˈʃɛl fuˈko]) (October 15, 1926 – June 25, 1984) was a French philosopher, historian and sociologist. . An illuminating path of visual communication led from Gerd Arntz's pictograms of the '20s and '30s, via the Cold War comics of Seth Tobocman, to recent works by the Argentinian Grupo de Arte Callejero, who commemorate that country's brutal state-sponsored terrorism Noun 1. state-sponsored terrorism - terrorism practiced by a government against its own people or in support of international terrorism
act of terrorism, terrorism, terrorist act - the calculated use of violence (or the threat of violence) against civilians in
 in the '70s and early '80s with laconic la·con·ic  
adj.
Using or marked by the use of few words; terse or concise. See Synonyms at silent.



[Latin Lac
 and denunciatory "signs" painted with syn thetic thet·ic   also thet·i·cal
adj.
1. Beginning with, constituting, or relating to the thesis in prosody.

2. Presented dogmatically; arbitrarily prescribed.
 resin in public places. Creischer and Siekmann also clarified the link between socialist infographics and the antiglobalization movement.

The contemporary works here were consistently by artists for whom art is always already political engagement. For example, Thomas Klipper, who occasionally tattoos parquet floors using small chainsaws, was represented here by city portraits of places that were important for his artistic and political socialization. Klaus Weber exhibited DEMO INVERSE (Inverse protest), 2001, the video of an event he carried out as a properly registered demonstration in Berlin in 2001. The simultaneous entry of an "activist" car mounted with loudspeakers and a "repressive" police personnel wagon functioned as a model for the relationship of content and (external) form. Linda Bilda's Plexiglas sculpture of Joan of Arc Joan of Arc, Fr. Jeanne D'Arc (zhän därk), 1412?–31, French saint and national heroine, called the Maid of Orléans; daughter of a farmer of Domrémy on the border of Champagne and Lorraine.  could be understood as an homage to a historical figure who had accepted battle as a possibility. With a series of drawings concerning the controversial "rational individualist" Ayn Rand by Christoph Schafer, photographs of a dislocated dis·lo·cate  
tr.v. dis·lo·cat·ed, dis·lo·cat·ing, dis·lo·cates
1. To put out of usual or proper place, position, or relationship.

2.
 Belgrade by Katja Eydel, sound installations by the Ultra-red group, Woody Guth rie appropriations by Global Dustbowl Ballads, and Dierk Schmidt's paraphrase of Gericault, among others, the curators made a sophisticated loop around the theme of activism in art.

Thesis and antithesis were ultimately recapitulated by the two unexpected stars of the exhibition: Yvonne Rainer's 1980 film Journeys from Berlin/1971 relates relationships of power to personal circumstances. The film, which concerns the end of Rainer's work as a dance performer, documents anticommunist repression in West Germany in the late '60s and pinpoints the situation that moved the second legendary figure in the exhibition, Charlotte Posenenske, to abandon art altogether. "Art," said this sociologist, who died in 1985, "can contribute nothing to resolving pressing social problems." Could be, one was tempted to think--all the while falling helplessly in love with Posenenske's grandiose Vierkantrohr aus der Serie DW (Rectangular tube, series DW), 1967, made of corrugated cardboard. Being industrially produced, this sculpture--at times mistaken by members of the public for a ventilation duct--self-consciously leaves the realm of art to merge with the social environment.

Translated from German by Sara Ogger.
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Article Details
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Author:Huck, Brigitte
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EUAU
Date:May 1, 2002
Words:624
Previous Article:NIC Hess: Kunstmuseum. (Winterthur, Switzerland).(Brief Article)
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