Belvedere 21

Flirting with Strangers

09 Sep 2015 - 31 Jan 2016

Exhibition view: Flirting with Strangers. Encounters with Works from the Collection
© Belvedere, Vienna
Erwin Wurm
Woman with Oranges, 2000
Donation by the Ploner Collection, © Belvedere, Vienna/© Bildrecht, Wien, 2015
Walter Obholzer
Das Duell, 1985
From means of the gallery support of the federation, © Belvedere, Vienna
Maja Vukoje
Patata, 2013
© Belvedere, Vienna/Bildrecht Vienna, 2015
Gelatin
Mona Lisa, 2007
© Artothek des Bundes
Salvatore Viviano
call me maybe, 2015
\xa9 Belvedere, Vienna
Birgit Jürgenssen
Standbein, 1977
Loan by Österreichischen Ludwig-Stiftung, Wien/ © Estate Birgit Jürgenssen/ Bildrecht, Vienna, 2015
Franz Amann
No. 2, 2014
© Belvedere, Vienna
Alois Mosbacher
Gèricault, 2012
© Belvedere, Vienna
Lukas Jasansky
Martin Polák Untitled, 1994-1996
© Belvedere, Vienna
FLIRTING WITH STRANGERS
Encounters with Works from the Collection
9 September 2015 - 31 January 2016

Curated by Luisa Ziaja and Severin Dünser

Why not, for once, look at a collection as a fabric of relationships among things and their encounters? And as an opportunity that, as Baudrillard put it, might establish an ‘everyday prose of objects, [...] a triumphant unconscious discourse’? Picking up on this idea, Flirting with Strangers, the autumn exhibition on the ground floor of the 21er Haus, stages an exciting, playful, and sometimes also unexpected encounter of works from the collection. Is it necessary to have many things in common to “strike up a conversation”, or is it rather individual peculiarities that will ignite a spark?

Works of art are objects to which a particularly high degree of individuality is ascribed: none exactly resembles the other, and they are characterised by their uniqueness. This is why they are usually also considered worth collecting. Once chosen, they become one among many, which is one of the paradoxes inherent to collecting of comparing what is incomparable. Museum collections are generally associated with the systematisation of objects according to scientific categories and art historical classification criteria that are apt to establish connections, make sense, and, as powerful entities of interpretation, produce authoritative knowledge. And exhibitions are, after all, organisations and arrangements of knowledge, which, however, also have the potential to conceive alternative interpretations and that enable actualisation.

Central tasks of the 21er Haus comprise collecting, preserving, studying, and not least exhibiting contemporary Austrian art in an international context. Flirting with Strangers presents works by more than one hundred artists in a show that seeks to rethink the format of a collection exhibition: it deliberately unfolds along achronological lines and independent of the history of styles while occasionally emphasising seemingly negligible aspects or similarities that might be far fetched – with the intention to sharpen our focus on detail and the individual piece and at the same time to propose possible unexpected relationships among things.

With works by
Herbert Albrecht, Franz Amann, Martin Arnold, Richard Artschwager, Jo Baer, Franz Barwig the Elder, Georg Baselitz, Herbert Bayer, Herbert Boeckl, Norbertine Bresslern-Roth, Cäcilia Brown, Gerard Byrne, John Chamberlain, Lovis Corinth, Josef Dabernig, Svenja Deininger, Thomas Demand, Verena Dengler, Carola Dertnig, Gerald Domenig, Heinrich Dunst, Angus Fairhurst, Gelatin, Bruno Gironcoli, Carl Goebel the Younger, Roland Goeschl, Dan Graham, Robert Gruber, Julia Haller, Swetlana Heger & Plamen Dejanov, Alois Heidel, Damien Hirst, Benjamin Hirte, Christine & Irene Hohenbüchler, Kathi Hofer, Lisa Holzer, Judith Hopf, Bernhard Hosa, Kurt Hüpfner, Christian Hutzinger, Lukáš Jasanský & Martin Polák, Anna Jermolaewa, Ernst Juch, Birgit Jürgenssen, Tillman Kaiser, Luisa Kasalicky, Michael Kienzer, Erika Giovanna Klien, Jakob Lena Knebl, Kiki Kogelnik, Nathalie Koger, Peter Kogler, Oskar Kokoschka, Cornelius Kolig, Elke Silvia Krystufek, Hans Kupelwieser, František Kupka, Maria Lassnig, Sonia Leimer, Anita Leisz, Sherrie Levine, Thomas Locher, Sarah Lucas, Marko Luli?, Christian Mayer, Dorit Margreiter, Christoph Meier, Carl von Merode, Alois Mosbacher, Matt Mullican, Edvard Munch, Flora Neuwirth, Oswald Oberhuber, Nick Oberthaler, Walter Obholzer, Giulio Paolini, Elisabeth Penker, Rudolf Polanszky, Lisl Ponger, Antonín Procházka, Florian Pumhösl, Bernd Ribbeck, Gerwald Rockenschaub, Anton Romako, Anja Ronacher, Wally Salner, Christian Schwarzwald, Johannes Schweiger, Martina Steckholzer, Edward Steichen, Rudolf Stingel, Gerold Tagwerker, Rosemarie Trockel, Esin Turan, Salvatore Viviano, Johannes Vogl, Maja Vukoje, Rebecca Warren, Christoph Weber, Letizia Werth, Franz West, Sue Williams, Robert Wilson, Erwin Wurm, Otto Zitko, Heimo Zobernig
 

Tags: Franz Amann, Martin Arnold, Richard Artschwager, Jo Baer, Jo Baer, Georg Baselitz, Herbert Bayer, Herbert Boeckl, Gerard Byrne, John Chamberlain, Lovis Corinth, Josef Dabernig, Svenja Deininger, Thomas Demand, Verena Dengler, Carola Dertnig, Gerald Domenig, Heinrich Dunst, Angus Fairhurst, Gelatin, Bruno Gironcoli, Dan Graham, Julia Haller, Damien Hirst, Benjamin Hirte, Kathi Hofer, Christine & Irene Hohenbüchler, Lisa Holzer, Judith Hopf, Christian Hutzinger, Anna Jermolaewa, Birgit Jürgenssen, Birgit Jürgenssen, Tillman Kaiser, Luisa Kasalicky, Michael Kienzer, Jakob Lena Knebl, Kiki Kogelnik, Peter Kogler, Oskar Kokoschka, Elke Silvia Krystufek, Hans Kupelwieser, Frantisek Kupka, Maria Lassnig, Sonia Leimer, Anita Leisz, Sherrie Levine, Thomas Locher, Sarah Lucas, Dorit Margreiter, Christoph Meier, Alois Mosbacher, Matt Mullican, Edvard Munch, Flora Neuwirth, Oswald Oberhuber, Nick Oberthaler, Walter Obholzer, Giulio Paolini, Elisabeth Penker, Rudolf Polanszky, Lisl Ponger, Florian Pumhösl, Bernd Ribbeck, Gerwald Rockenschaub, Anja Ronacher, Christian Schwarzwald, Martina Steckholzer, Rudolf Stingel, Gerold Tagwerker, Rosemarie Trockel, Johannes Vogl, Maja Vukoje, Rebecca Warren, Christoph Weber, Franz West, Sue Williams, Robert Wilson, Erwin Wurm, Otto Zitko, Heimo Zobernig