VIENNESE SEASON: Actionism: Günter BRUS, Otto MÜHL, Hermann NITSCH, Rudolf SCHWARZKOGLER
Austin / Desmond Fine Art and Richard Saltoun Gallery announce a two-part series of Viennese art: Actionism and Feminism.
The season begins with Actionism, examining this sensational movement borne out of expressive action painting in Vienna in the late 1950s. The second, Feminism, will present the work of Valie EXPORT and Friedl Kubelka, two artists using their body and the action of documentary photograph to subvert the traditional notion of the "great male artist". As Actionists chose to challenge the mythology of traditional art mediums such as painting and sculpture so did these two Feminist artists choose to challenge the hierarchy of the art establishment.
This is the first major survey of Viennese Actionism in the UK. The exhibition will present the work of Günter Brus, Otto Mühl, Hermann Nitsch, and Rudolf Schwarzkogler. Virtually over by 1970, the radical movement was short-lived but rich and dense in each artist's output. Performance works, aktions, were at the heart of their work, extending the use and meaning of painting. Blood, animal carcasses, razor blades, and ropes were all used as implements to create these aktions.
The exhibition will include vintage photographs of performances by all four artists as well as one of the original surviving stretchers used by Nitsch, rare in its survival and that he only ever performed six aktions.
This exhibition follows a recent major publication, Viennese Actionism: Art and Upheaval in 1960s Vienna by Museum Moderner Kunst Siftung Ludwig, Wien.
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Günter BRUSKopfbemalung, Aktion, Wien, 1964Vintage black and white photograph24 x 17.5 cm
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Rudolf SCHWARZKOGLER3 Aktion, 1965/75Set of 13 black and white photographic prints and 1 facsimile of notes, within a blue cloth-bound box30 x 40 cm (each)
21.5 cm x 15 cm (facsimile notebook)Edition 37 of 40 -
Rudolf SCHWARZKOGLER6 Aktion / 6th Action, 1966Set of four vintage black and white photographs (photography by M. Epp)24 x 18 cm (each)
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Rudolf SCHWARZKOGLER4 Aktion / 4th Action, 1965Set of 6 vintage black and white photographs24 x 18 cm (each)
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Hermann NITSCH4 Aktion, 1964Vintage black and white photograph, unique18 x 13 cm
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Hermann NITSCH12 Aktion, 1965Vintage black and white photograph with marker, unique15.5 x 12 cm
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Hermann NITSCHUntitled (Blood Painting), 1960Vintage black and white photograph, unique12.5 x 17 cm
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Otto MUEHLMaterialaktion 3, 1964Cibachrome photograph, unique, vintage116 x 80 cm
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Viennese Season: Actionism (6 March - 4 April 2014) installation views
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Viennese Season: Actionism (6 March - 4 April 2014) installation views
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Viennese Season: Actionism (6 March - 4 April 2014) installation views
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Viennese Season: Actionism (6 March - 4 April 2014) installation views
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Viennese Season: Actionism (6 March - 4 April 2014) installation views
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Viennese Season: Actionism (6 March - 4 April 2014) installation views
Austin / Desmond Fine Art and Richard Saltoun Gallery announce a two-part series of Viennese art: Actionism and Feminism.
The season begins with Actionism, examining this sensational movement borne out of expressive action painting in Vienna in the late 1950s. The second, Feminism, will present the work of Valie EXPORT and Friedl Kubelka, two artists using their body and the action of documentary photograph to subvert the traditional notion of the "great male artist". As Actionists chose to challenge the mythology of traditional art mediums such as painting and sculpture so did these two Feminist artists choose to challenge the hierarchy of the art establishment.
This is the first major survey of Viennese Actionism in the UK. The exhibition will present the work of Günter Brus, Otto Mühl, Hermann Nitsch, and Rudolf Schwarzkogler. Virtually over by 1970, the radical movement was short-lived but rich and dense in each artist's output. Performance works, aktions, were at the heart of their work, extending the use and meaning of painting. Blood, animal carcasses, razor blades, and ropes were all used as implements to create these aktions.
The exhibition will include vintage photographs of performances by all four artists as well as one of the original surviving stretchers used by Nitsch, rare in its survival and that he only ever performed six aktions.
This exhibition follows a recent major publication, Viennese Actionism: Art and Upheaval in 1960s Vienna by Museum Moderner Kunst Siftung Ludwig, Wien.