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  • 1
    Language: German
    Pages: 228 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Edition: 1. Auflage
    Year of publication: 2015
    Keywords: Berlin ; Weimarer Republik ; Kunst ; Künstler ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: Die Folgen der Novemberrevolution und die Krisen der Weimarer Republik ließen mit Beginn der zwanziger Jahre ein hedonistisches, hektisches, oft überdrehtes Lebensgefühl aufkommen. Es äußerte sich in der Jagd nach Unterhaltung, in den grotesken Tanzbewegungen des Charleston, im Exhibitionismus der Burlesque, im Spott des Cabaret, im kunterbunten Mix des Varieté oder im provozierenden Styling der „Neuen Frau“, kurz: im sprichwörtlichen Tempo der Großstadt. Berlin war plötzlich das Zentrum der Avantgarde auf allen Gebieten der bildenden, der angewandten und der darstellenden Künste. Bisher fehlte ein umfassender Überblick über das kreative Schaffen dieser Zeit. Mit 500 Werken von rund 200 Malern, Grafikern, Fotografen, Kunsthandwerkern und Modeschöpfern wirft die Ausstellung deshalb einen differenzierten Blick auf die Epoche der nicht immer „goldenen“ Zwanziger. Sie vermittelt ein Gefühl für den Zeitgeist dieser Ära und gibt eine Ahnung von dem Verlust, den auch die Kultur durch die Gewaltherrschaft der Nationalsozialisten erlitt.
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Pages: 157 Seiten, [5] Blatt , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2015
    Keywords: Kunst ; Installation ; Kunstausstellung ; Ausstellung ; Künstler
    Abstract: Tsibi Geva has been selected to present Archeology of the Present in the Israeli Pavilion at the 56th International Art Exhibition – la Biennale di Venezia. Geva, who lives and works in Tel Aviv, is one of Israel’s most prominent and influential artists and has exhibited extensively in major exhibitions across Israel, the USA, and Europe. Geva works in diverse media, his work often pushing beyond its physical limits into unique large-scale, site-specific installations. Archeology of the Present will extend over the exterior of the pavilion as well as through its interior, destabilizing familiar divisions between inside and outside, functional and the representational, high and low, abandoned, found, and manipulated elements. It will encompass formal and thematic elements characteristic of Geva’s work throughout his career and will present paintings alongside sculptural installations and abandoned and manipulated objects, abolishing hierarchical distinctions between artistic mediums and structures. In doing so, the project will give expression to Geva’s ongoing concern with elements related to the notion of ‘home’ – including terrazzo tiles, windows, shutters, lattices, and cement blocks; elements which exist as fragments of what once was, or could in principle constitute, a home. The project will raise self-reflexive artistic concerns and epistemological questions, as well as political and cultural questions of locality and immigration, hybrid identity, existential anxiety and existence in an age of instability. The physical layout of the project will create sharp transitions between experiences of blockage, discomfort, or spatial ambiguity and intimate, poetic moments, so that fragility and crudeness, lyricism and violence, are inextricably intertwined. Geva’s work contains numerous layers of significance shaped by processes of figuration and abstraction, revelation and concealment. The question of painting in particular, and of the art object in general, is present in his work alongside political and cultural questions, which simultaneously camouflage and enhance one another. Employing disruption and displacement, repetition and accumulation, Geva makes hybrid works that open up new discursive channels. Geva’s long-term engagement with the stratified structure of identity, and Archeology of the Present in particular, will offer an opportunity to explore this notion within the wider narrative of nationality as proposed by the Venice Biennale. In a year when curator Okwui Enwezor proposes to focus on “All the World’s Futures,” Geva’s site-specific, all-encompassing installation may also be read with regard to the current state of humanity and the world.
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