The month of February 2011 has seen a flurry of activity in and around the Jewish Museum in Vienna. The controversy surrounding the unusual method of dismantling the permanent exhibition for the purpose of modernising the building and renewing the exhibition has largely been conducted in German on Austrian and German websites and weblogs. The English-speaking world has thus far hardly picked up on the issues raised by the commentators in Europe. The following is an attempt to summarise events to date and outline the issues motivating the commentators and critics.
On 1 July 2010 the new director of the Jewish Museum Vienna, Dr Danielle Spera, took up office. One of her first projects was to be the necessary modernisation of the building and the development of a new permanent exhibition to replace its previous exhibition which was opened in 1996. At the beginning of February images of the destruction of the centrepiece of the previous permanent exhibition, a series of holograms featuring images relating to Jewish history in Austria, reached the press (see image_1; source www.juedisches-museum-blog.de). The publication of these images prompted museum professionals and critics across Europe to react in shock and disbelief at this violent dismantling of an acclaimed exhibition.
The issues raised by critics, first on the weblog of museologist and art historian Gottfried Fliedl (http://museologien.blogspot.com) and then in an open letter by a group of concerned professionals published on the weblog of the Jewish Museum Munich (http://www.juedisches-museum-blog.de/2011/02/10/entglittene-bilder/) concern the manner in which the holograms were dismantled and the implications this has for the history and the future of exhibition of Jewish history in Vienna. Questions regarding the future permanent exhibition were also raised, in particular as there appears to be no wider academically supported consultation process in advance of mounting a new exhibition.
Since the first week of February, critics and the Museum’s leadership have been involved in a series of public exchanges with the Museum seeking to defend its practice (http://www.jmw.at/sites/default/files/Faktenbericht_Geschichte%20einer%20%C3%B6sterreichischen%20Aufregung.pdf). While it appears that the Museum is able to publish its responses to the critics in the local Austrian press (for a selection of articles see here: http://diepresse.com/home/kultur/kunst/632936/Juedisches-Museum-zeigt-zweites-HologrammSet?from=suche.intern.portal), the critics largely have to rely on private weblogs and email exchanges to publicise their views.
The critics have consistently asked for more information about the reasoning for the violence used in dismantling the holograms, about the intention for archiving the previous exhibition, and about the plans for the new exhibition due to be opened in the autumn of this year.
The issues raised can be summarised as follows:
- Critics are agreed that change and renewal in permanent exhibitions is necessary.
There is no question that the appointment of a new director and the comprehensive modernisation of the building are opportunities to effect changes to the permanent exhibition and present a new concept. However, critics are uneasy about the path taken by the Museum, in particular they are concerned about the lack of critical engagement with the community of museum professionals and academics as well as the general public in regard to the new exhibition.
· Was it necessary to destroy the holograms in order to remove them to make way for the modernisation of the main museum building (Palais Eskeles)?
The museum claims that it was technically impossible not to destroy the holograms, though no documentation has been produced to confirm this view. Felicitas Heimann-Jelinek and Martin Kohlbauer produced the concept for the holograms which were then produced and installed by an outside company. Whether the Museum solicited and received a report from this company regarding the safe removal of the holograms has not been made public. Further, it does not seem that there were/are any plans for archiving the previous permanent exhibition as is now curatorial practice.
If indeed it was impossible to preserve the holograms, the process of arriving at this conclusion should have been discussed and documented.
The museum claims that it was technically impossible not to destroy the holograms, though no documentation has been produced to confirm this view. Felicitas Heimann-Jelinek and Martin Kohlbauer produced the concept for the holograms which were then produced and installed by an outside company. Whether the Museum solicited and received a report from this company regarding the safe removal of the holograms has not been made public. Further, it does not seem that there were/are any plans for archiving the previous permanent exhibition as is now curatorial practice.
If indeed it was impossible to preserve the holograms, the process of arriving at this conclusion should have been discussed and documented.
- The holograms were not merely a technology of display, but were themselves artefacts which are on display.
(see image_2; source www.juedisches-museum-blog.de)
This dimension of the previous permanent exhibition is denied by the Museum. The Museum leadership displays a lack of awareness of the significance of the previous permanent exhibition in the Jewish Museum Vienna. Technical difficulties are foregrounded in all responses of the Museum. The holograms are characterised as merely a display technology which has now been superseded by more advanced media projections. This approach is not taking seriously the concerns raised by the critics who unanimously value to holograms as a museological milestone and artistic production which uniquely problematises the display of Jewish history in museums. Hence their significance goes beyond technological issues and concerns the approach to displaying history.
There is no recognition on the part of the Museum of the critical acclaim of the exhibition. This is astonishing as the international community has commented favourably on the innovative design and critical features of the exhibition which had the holograms as a centrepiece. Among the critics and international commentators on the exhibition, the holograms were appreciated both as a significant medium of display and as artefacts on display which were able to involve the visitor physically in the discovery of approaches to Jewish history in a post-1945 exhibition in Europe. Thus the holograms were not simply a display technology, such as a glass case or television screen, but part of the collections of the Jewish Museum Vienna. Critics point to the principles of ICOM which explicitly state that such artefacts need to be preserved and cared for.
- What are the plans for the permanent exhibition due to open in autumn 2011?
It has been critically remarked that there does not seem to be any consultation process with a committee or board of experts in the field of (Austrian) Jewish history and museum studies. Such a process is now established practice at all major museums and it appears incongruous that a (until now) world-leading institution in the innovative exhibition of Jewish history is forgoing this important consultative process.
15 February 2011
Hannah Holtschneider
University of Edinburgh