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    georg schöllhammer

    Explore " georg schöllhammer" with insightful episodes like "Interview mit Channa Horwitz", "Interview mit Channa Horwitz", "Interview mit Sanja Iveković", "Interview mit Sanja Iveković" and "Interview mit Graciela Carnevale" from podcasts like ""ZKM | Karlsruhe /// Gespräche /// Talks", "ZKM | Karlsruhe /// Ausstellungen /// Exhibitions", "ZKM | Karlsruhe /// Gespräche /// Talks", "ZKM | Karlsruhe /// Ausstellungen /// Exhibitions" and "ZKM | Karlsruhe /// Gespräche /// Talks"" and more!

    Episodes (10)

    Interview mit Channa Horwitz

    Interview mit Channa Horwitz

    Moments. Eine Geschichte der Performance in 10 Akten | Artist Talk

    Exhibition 08.03.2012 – 29.04.2012

    Channa Horwitz’s conceptual series Sonakinatography comprises drawings, performances and musical compositions. She includes sound and movement, in other words temporal structures, in her minimalist notational system. By means of a mathematical order based on the sequence 1‒8, Horwitz extends the rigid structures of seriality to infinite variation possibilities. The linear logic, the monosyllabic rhythm of which can be modulated and multiplied in an infinite variety of ways, Horwitz has also repeatedly staged in concrete performative musical acts. Moments shows two of these earlier realizations and a new interpretation, as well as a selection of minimalist drawings on which these are based. Horwitz’s work in the performance field, originating in a strictly spatial system, has an aesthetic concept.

    Short Biography
    In her works, the North American performance and conceptual artist Channa Horwitz (*1932 in Los Angeles, USA) has been experimenting since the beginning of the 1960s with numbers, rhythms, movements as well as spatial and temporal structures: she records diagrams temporally, which may be read as musical scores; movements are translated into colored schemes. The compositions thus created are, to some extent, designed as choreography or augmented in multimedia interpretations. As performance artist, Horwitz works together, among others, with Allan Kaprow. Horwitz’s minimalist-structural work, which could be viewed at the beginning of 2010 at Solway-Jones Gallery (Los Angeles), is currently experiencing international rediscovery and re-evaluation as the work of one of the most important North American artists of her generation.

    Interview mit Channa Horwitz

    Interview mit Channa Horwitz

    Moments. Eine Geschichte der Performance in 10 Akten | Artist Talk

    Exhibition 08.03.2012 – 29.04.2012

    Channa Horwitz’s conceptual series Sonakinatography comprises drawings, performances and musical compositions. She includes sound and movement, in other words temporal structures, in her minimalist notational system. By means of a mathematical order based on the sequence 1‒8, Horwitz extends the rigid structures of seriality to infinite variation possibilities. The linear logic, the monosyllabic rhythm of which can be modulated and multiplied in an infinite variety of ways, Horwitz has also repeatedly staged in concrete performative musical acts. Moments shows two of these earlier realizations and a new interpretation, as well as a selection of minimalist drawings on which these are based. Horwitz’s work in the performance field, originating in a strictly spatial system, has an aesthetic concept.

    Short Biography
    In her works, the North American performance and conceptual artist Channa Horwitz (*1932 in Los Angeles, USA) has been experimenting since the beginning of the 1960s with numbers, rhythms, movements as well as spatial and temporal structures: she records diagrams temporally, which may be read as musical scores; movements are translated into colored schemes. The compositions thus created are, to some extent, designed as choreography or augmented in multimedia interpretations. As performance artist, Horwitz works together, among others, with Allan Kaprow. Horwitz’s minimalist-structural work, which could be viewed at the beginning of 2010 at Solway-Jones Gallery (Los Angeles), is currently experiencing international rediscovery and re-evaluation as the work of one of the most important North American artists of her generation.

    Interview mit Sanja Iveković

    Interview mit Sanja Iveković

    Moments. Eine Geschichte der Performance in 10 Akten | Artist Talk

    Exhibition 08.03.2012 – 29.04.2012

    Since her first appearance in the context of the “New Art Practice” in Yugoslavia of the early 1970s, in her works Sanja Iveković has transformed the medial construction of images and the constellations of power which they conceal. Here the artist is primarily concerned with the exploration of images and spaces attached to women. Iveković also extended critical reflections of the media to the analysis of the institutional conditions and rituals of the art scene. The series of three performances from this period and presented in Moments, actively brings the public into the interplay of media presence, as well as real presence and absence.
    Sanja Iveković is one of the first artists in former Yugoslavia to have combined performance and video art. Over the course of the 1990s, she gave her work greater political accentuation and, as feminist activist, also initiated important projects. Her performance Practice Makes a Master will be re-enacted by Sonja Pregrad as part of the exhibition opening on March 17, 2012 and March 18, 2012 at 4 pm.

    Short Biography
    Sanja Iveković (*1949 in Zagreb, Croatia, former Yugoslavia) studied from 1968 to 1971 at the Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb. Her photo montages, videos, performances and installations emerging since the early 1970s have been characterized by a critical questioning of the mass media and their identity-forging potential. By personally entering into public discourse ‒ whether in the form of photographic representations in the media, or as the actual protagonist of performances ‒ Iveković brings out into the open the collective social codes of behavior based on gender-specific standardized patterns in mass media. As one of the first explicitly feminist artists in Croatia, she has also been the facilitator and founder of a large number of political initiatives including the Women Artists’ Center Elektra and the Center for Women’s Studies in Zagreb. Iveković participated in numerous international exhibitions including documenta 11, and 12 and Manifesta 2. In November 2011, her retrospective Lady Rosa of Luxembourg took place at the MoMA New York.

    Interview mit Sanja Iveković

    Interview mit Sanja Iveković

    Moments. Eine Geschichte der Performance in 10 Akten | Artist Talk

    Exhibition 08.03.2012 – 29.04.2012

    Since her first appearance in the context of the “New Art Practice” in Yugoslavia of the early 1970s, in her works Sanja Iveković has transformed the medial construction of images and the constellations of power which they conceal. Here the artist is primarily concerned with the exploration of images and spaces attached to women. Iveković also extended critical reflections of the media to the analysis of the institutional conditions and rituals of the art scene. The series of three performances from this period and presented in Moments, actively brings the public into the interplay of media presence, as well as real presence and absence.
    Sanja Iveković is one of the first artists in former Yugoslavia to have combined performance and video art. Over the course of the 1990s, she gave her work greater political accentuation and, as feminist activist, also initiated important projects. Her performance Practice Makes a Master will be re-enacted by Sonja Pregrad as part of the exhibition opening on March 17, 2012 and March 18, 2012 at 4 pm.

    Short Biography
    Sanja Iveković (*1949 in Zagreb, Croatia, former Yugoslavia) studied from 1968 to 1971 at the Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb. Her photo montages, videos, performances and installations emerging since the early 1970s have been characterized by a critical questioning of the mass media and their identity-forging potential. By personally entering into public discourse ‒ whether in the form of photographic representations in the media, or as the actual protagonist of performances ‒ Iveković brings out into the open the collective social codes of behavior based on gender-specific standardized patterns in mass media. As one of the first explicitly feminist artists in Croatia, she has also been the facilitator and founder of a large number of political initiatives including the Women Artists’ Center Elektra and the Center for Women’s Studies in Zagreb. Iveković participated in numerous international exhibitions including documenta 11, and 12 and Manifesta 2. In November 2011, her retrospective Lady Rosa of Luxembourg took place at the MoMA New York.

    Interview mit Graciela Carnevale

    Interview mit Graciela Carnevale

    Moments. Eine Geschichte der Performance in 10 Akten | Artist Talk

    Exhibition 08.03.2012 – 29.04.2012

    In 1968 Graciela Carnevale took part in the Ciclo de Arte Experimental, organized by the art group of the same name, with “Acción del Encierroa”: without being informed in advance, the public was locked in the exhibition space for over an hour. In other words, she took prisoners. A glass front facing outward provided a view into the inside of the neutral space, structured as a White Cube, to the incarcerated visitors. Carnevale, who had been working with minimalist works from the radius of the “primary structures” since the mid-1960s, later increasingly turned to a practice of art understood as emancipatory and political; for example, in the capitalism critical movement “Tcamán Arde”, the archive of which Carnevale had organized.
    In Moments, Carnevale’s work not only stands for a radical concept of the construction of public and witness, but, together with the archives, no less for a radical questioning of the possibility to present actions and political art in the museum context, accessible to the present.

    Short Biography
    As member of the artist’s group “Grupo de Artistas de Vanguardia”, Graciela Carnevale (* 1942 in Marcos Juárez, Argentinien) participated in conceptual exhibitions and demonstrations against established art in the years between 1965 and 1969. Carnevale also worked in connection with the political-activist movement “Tucumán Arde”, and archived their actions. From 1994 in the collective “Grupo Patrimonio” she has held exhibitions, actions and interventions in urban spaces. Her artistic approach – represented by works in major collections in Latin America, as well as in MoMA, New York or MACBA, Barcelona and that, among others, could be viewed at the documenta 12 in Kassel – focusses on social questions and art as an ethical attitude.

    Interview mit Graciela Carnevale

    Interview mit Graciela Carnevale

    Moments. Eine Geschichte der Performance in 10 Akten | Artist Talk

    Exhibition 08.03.2012 – 29.04.2012

    In 1968 Graciela Carnevale took part in the Ciclo de Arte Experimental, organized by the art group of the same name, with “Acción del Encierroa”: without being informed in advance, the public was locked in the exhibition space for over an hour. In other words, she took prisoners. A glass front facing outward provided a view into the inside of the neutral space, structured as a White Cube, to the incarcerated visitors. Carnevale, who had been working with minimalist works from the radius of the “primary structures” since the mid-1960s, later increasingly turned to a practice of art understood as emancipatory and political; for example, in the capitalism critical movement “Tcamán Arde”, the archive of which Carnevale had organized.
    In Moments, Carnevale’s work not only stands for a radical concept of the construction of public and witness, but, together with the archives, no less for a radical questioning of the possibility to present actions and political art in the museum context, accessible to the present.

    Short Biography
    As member of the artist’s group “Grupo de Artistas de Vanguardia”, Graciela Carnevale (* 1942 in Marcos Juárez, Argentinien) participated in conceptual exhibitions and demonstrations against established art in the years between 1965 and 1969. Carnevale also worked in connection with the political-activist movement “Tucumán Arde”, and archived their actions. From 1994 in the collective “Grupo Patrimonio” she has held exhibitions, actions and interventions in urban spaces. Her artistic approach – represented by works in major collections in Latin America, as well as in MoMA, New York or MACBA, Barcelona and that, among others, could be viewed at the documenta 12 in Kassel – focusses on social questions and art as an ethical attitude.

    Interview mit Lynn Hershman Leeson

    Interview mit Lynn Hershman Leeson

    Moments. Eine Geschichte der Performance in 10 Akten | Artist Talk

    Exhibition 08.03.2012 – 29.04.2012

    Since she was created in 1972 by Lynn Hershman Leeson, the figure Roberta Breitmore moves and reproduces herself much like the ghostly double of the artist through the various realities and media formats. One could say Roberta Breitmore, performs media realities: she appears in films or in reality at vernissages, meets with men on dates, materializes in three-fold form, wanders onto the Golden Gate Bridge like on a film still of the American Independent Cinema, or becomes a victim of exorcist ritual. Roberta is a comic heroine; it is possible to communicate with her in cyberspace through the interface of a puppet which has her features and meet her in the virtual world of the “second life”. Her dress, her glasses, a wig are traces of this existence. Roberta owns an insurance card and is congratulated by the President of America on her virtual birthday. The media documentation of Roberta’s performance, which will be exhibited in Moments, are at the same time evidence of the most various formats in which a performance can represent itself: from Vintage Print, original photography, exhibition copy, poster or an advertisement, film, video, eye-witness account and art criticism etc. through to the copy of a film from the Internet on a Home-Printer. Lynn Hershman Leeson will develop this process of media duplication of the documents herself during her stay in Karlsruhe.

    Short Biography
    Since Lynn Hershman Leeson (*1941 in Cleveland Ohio, USA) began her career in the late 1960s as award-winning American media artist and filmmaker, she has received wide recognition for a body of work combining art with social commentary, particularly with regard to the relationship between humans and technology. A pioneer in New Media, she has been internationally acclaimed for her use of new technologies and her early investigations of issues such as identity in a time of consumerism, privacy in an era of surveillance, interfacing of humans and machines, and the relationship between real and virtual worlds. Hershman Leeson was awarded the ZKM Siemens Media Art Price in 1995 and the d.velop digital art award in 2010. Her work is, among others, in the collections of the MoMA in New York, the Tate Modern in London, the ZKM | Center for Art and Media in Karlsruhe and the Hess Art Collection. A major exhibition of her work will be presented at the Kunsthalle Bremen, in 2012.

    Interview mit Lynn Hershman Leeson

    Interview mit Lynn Hershman Leeson

    Moments. Eine Geschichte der Performance in 10 Akten | Artist Talk

    Exhibition 08.03.2012 – 29.04.2012

    Since she was created in 1972 by Lynn Hershman Leeson, the figure Roberta Breitmore moves and reproduces herself much like the ghostly double of the artist through the various realities and media formats. One could say Roberta Breitmore, performs media realities: she appears in films or in reality at vernissages, meets with men on dates, materializes in three-fold form, wanders onto the Golden Gate Bridge like on a film still of the American Independent Cinema, or becomes a victim of exorcist ritual. Roberta is a comic heroine; it is possible to communicate with her in cyberspace through the interface of a puppet which has her features and meet her in the virtual world of the “second life”. Her dress, her glasses, a wig are traces of this existence. Roberta owns an insurance card and is congratulated by the President of America on her virtual birthday. The media documentation of Roberta’s performance, which will be exhibited in Moments, are at the same time evidence of the most various formats in which a performance can represent itself: from Vintage Print, original photography, exhibition copy, poster or an advertisement, film, video, eye-witness account and art criticism etc. through to the copy of a film from the Internet on a Home-Printer. Lynn Hershman Leeson will develop this process of media duplication of the documents herself during her stay in Karlsruhe.

    Short Biography
    Since Lynn Hershman Leeson (*1941 in Cleveland Ohio, USA) began her career in the late 1960s as award-winning American media artist and filmmaker, she has received wide recognition for a body of work combining art with social commentary, particularly with regard to the relationship between humans and technology. A pioneer in New Media, she has been internationally acclaimed for her use of new technologies and her early investigations of issues such as identity in a time of consumerism, privacy in an era of surveillance, interfacing of humans and machines, and the relationship between real and virtual worlds. Hershman Leeson was awarded the ZKM Siemens Media Art Price in 1995 and the d.velop digital art award in 2010. Her work is, among others, in the collections of the MoMA in New York, the Tate Modern in London, the ZKM | Center for Art and Media in Karlsruhe and the Hess Art Collection. A major exhibition of her work will be presented at the Kunsthalle Bremen, in 2012.

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