mumok

Art into Life!

Collector Wolfgang Hahn and the 60s

10 Nov 2017 - 24 Jun 2018

Exhibition view: Art into Life! Collector Wolfgang Hahn and the 60s, mumok – Museum moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig Wien, 2018 © Photo: Lisa Rastl/mumok
ART INTO LIFE!
Collector Wolfgang Hahn and the 60s
10 November 2017 - 24 June 2018

Curated by Susanne Neuburger (mumok) and Barbara Engelbach (Museum Ludwig Köln)
Exhibition architecture: Eva Chytilek & Jakob Neulinger

In the 1960s, a new avantgarde movement emerged in the Rhineland. It was to break down the parameters of artistic disciplines, with an new internationally networked generation of artists coming from nouveau réalisme, Fluxus, and new music. One of the first collectors of their works was Wolfgang Hahn, chief restorer at the Wallraf Richartz Museum in Cologne. In 1978 his collection of around 400 works came to Vienna, where it is now one of mumok’s key collections. In the exhibition Art into Life! Collector Wolfgang Hahn and the 60s, mumok now presents the major works from the Hahn Collection.

The slogan “art into life” was taken literally in the 1960s. The aim was to overcome an obsolete tradition in painting, using everyday objects, texts, and musical scores instead of creating classical painting and sculpture. All the works shown in this exhibition, beginning with Door by Joseph Beuys and ending with Wolf Vostell‘s action objects, are indebted to this expanded concept of art. Happenings, actions, and performances of new music are well represented, with works by Allan Kaprow, Nam June Paik, and John Cage. Prominent works of Pop art by George Segal, Claes Oldenburg, and Tom Wesselman enter into dialogue with material images from nouveau réalisme, which is a focus of the Hahn Collection, including works by Daniel Spoerri, Jean Tinguely, and Niki de Saint Phalle.

Allan Kaprow: Push and Pull
Re-Invention by Eva Chytilek and Jakob Neulinger

In 1963, Allan Kaprow devised the environment Push and Pull. A Furniture Comedy for Hans Hofmann. Following instructions, visitors to his 1963 presentation were able to move items of furniture to and fro in the spirit of Hofmann‘s abstract teaching methods. In later presentations, Kaprow required new interpretations of the work (re-inventions), which was based around a box with instructions written on card boards, which today are part of the Wolfgang Hahn Collection at mumok.

For the exhibition Art into Life! artists Eva Chytilek and Jakob Neulinger have created a re-interpretation of Kaprow’s work. In the very same space where Kaprow last re-invented his own work in 2002, Chytilek and Neulinger draw on his approach.
#pushxpull on Instagram
 

Tags: Joseph Beuys, John Cage, Barbara Engelbach, Hans Hofmann, Allan Kaprow, Susanne Neuburger, Claes Oldenburg, Nam June Paik, Niki de Saint Phalle, George Segal, Daniel Spoerri, Jean Tinguely, Wolf Vostell