Mittwoch, 19. Dezember 2018

„Kein Zutritt“. Und „Danke“ (Texte im Museum 605)

WienMuseum. Foto GF

Starker Adler (Texte im Museum 604)


Omas gegen Rechts

Der politisch korrekte Museumsshop. Kunsthalle Wien. Foto GF 2018

5768 (Texte im Museum 603)

Kunsthistorisches Museum

Dark tourism?

Hütte vor dem Kunsthistorischen Museum auf dem Weihnachtsmarkt. Foto GF 2018

"Spitzmaus Mummy in a Coffin". A rather senseless exhibition in the Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien.

This exhibition undercuts everything I have seen so far in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.

I would also like to do what I want with my girlfriend at the KHM and maybe I could think of something. But I wouldn't come to The New York Times or Die Zeit. And besides, I wouldn't have Prada behind me, the co-producer of the exhibition.

Filmmaker Wes Anderson worked with his companion "two years" in the museum, the introductory text reveals, and I wonder who made his films in the meantime. The information that for the first time all collections had cooperated here is a double oath of revelation, because one wonders whether the synergies between them have so far only been sought in the financial realm, and secondly why one needed an external curator in order to have this idea: to arrange objects in eight little rooms nested in a single room: green objects, objects made of wood, containers, child portraits, and so on. That's it.

As many critics have written, this has as much to do with Wunderkammer as an iPhone football game with FC Barcelona. No intelligent questioning of the museum order of things, no entanglement of the collections with regard to their history, also nothing with regard to new endowments of meaning through the merging of otherwise separate collections of objects, no illumination of the significance of individual objects through surprising contexts, no critical questioning of the prevailing orders in the permanent collections.

The whole thing is an exercise in the question of how much infantilization an audience can just tolerate. After having seen the show you can buy objects from Mrs. Malouf. About 250 Euro a piece. It's nice that the KHM is now also an art market and provides Prada with cultural added value.

I leave the word to Thomas Mießgang, who wrote in DIE ZEIT about the exhibition: "In any case, this guarantees high quotas within the framework of an economy of attention and can often be translated into blockbusters. The museum directors hope that the wild thinking of the artist curators will produce shock-like collisions, fascinating breaks, and unfathomable perspectives that will blow away the muffiness of a hundred years that has accumulated in the depot goods. If, however, as with shrew Mummy, only rares for cash can be seen without any special value of knowledge, and if festivals of chance are held, then museum visitors would like to quote Herman Melville's novel character Bartleby: "I would prefer not to."

Action against the art market

You can give it a try: The artist Robert Cenedella challenges the New York art establishment, Zachary Small reports on Hyperallergic, he has sued the city's leading museums for 100 million dollars, accusing them of conspiring with the city's top galleries.
"Cenedella alleges that the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Guggenheim Museum, the New Museum, and the Museum of Modern Art ignore artists, including himself, who are not represented by a select group of commercial galleries. His lawsuit claims that those museums violate anti-trust laws by conspiring with galleries including Gagosian, Pace, David Zwirner, Marian Goodman, and Hauser & Wirth to inflate the prices of certain artists. Previous reports have indeed found a link between prestigious gallery representation and museum acquisitions as metrics of an artist's career success. A 2015 study by The Art Newspaper found that, over a seven-year period, artists represented by five of the world's biggest galleries accounted for about a third of solo museum shows in the United States. Analyzing the careers of a half-million artists between 1980 and 2016, a more recent study released in November 2018 found that success as a professional artist relied on a similarly smell network of museums and galleries that included all 10 of the alleged co-conspirators in Cenedella's complaint."

Dienstag, 18. Dezember 2018

Selfie mit Schiele oder das Museum als social media

Leopold-Museum 2018. Foto GF

Videoüberwachung im ägyptischen Totentempel. Ahnenfurcht ider Ahnenglaube?


Hörstation (Sitzen im Museum)

Haus der Geschichte Österreich. Foto GF

Herzig (Texte im Museum 602)

Haus der Geschichte Österreich. Medienstation wo von BesucherInnen beigesteuerte, vom Kuratorenteam ausgewählte Fotos oder Videclips zu sehen sind. Foto GF

Wenn sonst nichts hilft (Sitzen im Museum)

Kunsthalle wien. Foto GF

Absitzen (Sitzen im Museum)

WienMuseum, Foto GF

Rote Fauteuils (Sitzen im Museum)

WienMuseum. Foto GF

Na sicher! (Texte im Museum 601)


Foto GF

Kiste (Sitzen im Museum)

WienMuseum Foto GF