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26 Sep 2013

WKV Stuttgart: 'Giving Form to the Impatience of Liberty'


Pedro G. Romero, Los Trabajadores, 2012

GIVING FORM TO THE IMPATIENCE OF LIBERTY
Württembergischer Kunstverein Stuttgart
http://www.wkv-stuttgart.de

Info

October 5, 2013 – January 12, 2014
Opening: October 4, 2013, 7 p.m. Conference: October 5+6, 2013 Hours: Tue, Thu-Sun: 11a.m-6p.m., Wed: 11a.m.-8p.m.

Contact

info@wkv-stuttgart.de



Address

http://www.wkv-stuttgart.de
Württembergischer Kunstverein Stuttgart
Schlosslatz 2
70173 Stuttgart
Germany

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Manuela Beck, Banu Cennetoglu / Yasemin Özcan, Stefan Constantinescu, Alice Creischer / Christian von Borries / Andreas Siekmann, Kiri Dalena, Barbara Ehnes, Heinz Frank, Grupo Baja Mar, Kiluanji Kia Henda, Francis Hunger, Sven Johne, Hassan Khan, Jakob Kolding, Pil and Galia Kollectiv, Dóra Maurer, Klaus Mettig / Katharina Sieverding, Marina Naprushkina, Boris Ondreicka, Marion von Osten, David Riff / Dmitry Gutov, Pedro G. Romero, Allan Sekula, Klaus Staeck, Wolfgang Stehle, Jeronimo Voss
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With the exhibition 'Giving Form to the Impatience of Liberty', the Württembergischer Kunstverein in Stuttgart circles around the complex relations and conflictual situations between art and politics, art and life, art and society.

The exhibition's point of origin rests in the younger forms and discourses of a (re)politicization of the arts, which are meant to be probed in terms of their heterogeneity and antagonisms. These are artistic practices which subject the aesthetic utopias of modernism that were said to have floundered to both a critical reading and a reevaluation, and which—reaching beyond a naïve euphoria or worldly-wise distance—renegotiate the political, societal, and critical potentialities of art. Activist positions and artworks with concrete political points of reference are considered here, as are works that approach, on a rather structural level, a rereading, realignment, and relocalization of knowledge, power, ideology, space, and the body. The works not only reference, but actually create acts of political articulation and subjectivization.

With regard to content, the exhibition focuses on developments from the capitalist disciplinary society to the neoliberal society of control. It reflects the latter's discourses of efficiency and creativity, its spatial and biopolitics. Using artistic means that extend from diverse graphical techniques to choreographies for dancing, the works explore private spaces, urban spaces, and working spaces.

The exhibition hones in on a range of different artistic practices and methods that are posited between the visual and the performing arts. Methods of rereading and reenactment are granted special attention here: reaching from the reconstruction of a Spanish torture chamber, which had been designed after the model of artists like Kandinsky, Klee, or Itten in order to irritate the inmate's perception (Romero), to the reenactment of a press conference where the three 'generals' of the State Museums of Berlin, Dresden, and Munich announced their collaboration in a project that was planed to conceive a universal museum for Dubai (Creischer, von Borries, Siekmann).

At the same time, with a view to contemporary art, the potentials of central methods and practices of the modern avant-gardes are explored, including editing, montage, and collage, as well as the situationist detournement (of reallocation) and dérive (of digression).

'Giving Form to the Impatience of Liberty' is part of the exhibition and event series 'Politics of Form' supported by the European Commission and developed by the Wiener Festwochen, the Württembergischer Kunstverein, and the Bergen Assembly. In projects that have been initiated both independently and in collaboration, each of the three locations takes a different approach to pursuing the political implications and possibilities related to art. 'Giving Form to the Impatience of Liberty' (curated by Hans D. Christ and Iris Dressler) presents the third exhibition in this series, preceded by 'Unrest of Form: Imagining the Political Subject' in Vienna (curators: Karl Baratta, Stefanie Carp, Matthias Pees, Hedwig Saxenhuber, and Georg Schöllhammer) and 'Monday Begins on Saturday in Bergen' (curators: Ekaterina Degot and David Riff).

FURTHER INFORMATION
www.wkv-stuttgart.de/en/program/2013/exhibitions/impatience-of-liberty