Pawel Althamer, Joze Bari, Thomas Baumann, Cezary Bodzianowski, Copenhagen
Free University (Henriette Heise & Jakob Jakobsen), Josef Dabernig, Ricarda
Denzer, Tomislav Gotovac, Renée Green, Elisabeth Grübl, Florian Hecker,
Patrick Jolley & Reynold Reynolds, Martin Kaltner, Július Koller, N.I.C.J.O.B.,
Deimantas Narkevicius, Roman Ondák, George Ovashvili, Mladen Stilinovic,
Werner Würtinger, Carey Young
Ausgeträumt..., Photo: Pez Hejduk
Unfortunately, to get to the future one has to live through the present (Hanif
Kureishi)
Mladen Stilinovic, Photo: Pez Hejduk
"Ausgeträumt..." addresses
a principle atmosphere of the present, one of disillusionment, almost resignation,
through which the social and political realities in broad sections of Europe,
outside the realm of geopolitical demarcations, are perceived. It is a very general
atmosphere that is variously motivated, depending on different ways of living,
but which many nevertheless find inevitable.
Deimantas Narkevicius, Energy Lithuania, 2000
The collapse of real-socialist systems led to the triumphant formulation of a
seemingly natural connection between democracy and capitalism. To this extent,
the end of the confrontation of systems between east and west triggered an abundance
of projects. The propagated economic prosperity due to global capitalism, the
suggestive power of the media, the promises of new communication technologies,
all of this led many to believe, for a brief period, in the dream of a somehow
better future. It seemed that comprehensive democratization, in which all citizens
could directly participate at last, was close at hand. Political reality, however,
soon revealed the hopes tied to this dream to be an illusion. From the European
perspective, war in the countries of former Yugoslavia and increasingly globally
operating economics, which specifically do not take the individual into account,
soon made it clear that supposed progress has its price. And it is a price that
is not paid by the western industrialized nations.
Pawel Althamer, Photo: Pez Hejduk
A basis for the current skepticism,
as well as for structural standstill, may be identified in that most explanatory
models still take recourse to democracy as a given perfect model, insisting on
processuality borne by western rationality on the way to a better world. Yet a
consideration of local and global political everyday life provides enough reasons
to doubt the development capability of social-political agency defined in this
sense. A questioning of the hegemony of western democracies was one of the results
of the fact that, instead of meeting idealistic expectations and humanist ideals,
in other words instead of a comprehensive democratization, in which every subject
is addressed as citizen, every imaginable form of nationalism and fundamentalism
arose in response to global capitalism and neoliberalism. Rather than migration
movements leading to an expansion of democratic ideas, racism and xenophobia have
increasingly become public topics in Europe again.
Tomislav Gotovac, Photo: Pez Hejduk
The film theorist Georg Seeßlen
has described three phases of development for the western societies of the 20th
/ 21st century. He says that these have developed from a principle of capitalism
and democracy through a state of democracy in capitalism to the present understanding
of democracy as capitalism. The market determines social agency, competitiveness
is the fundamental structure of communication. Symbolic and actual participation
in power has degenerated into a pseudo-cultural production, in which politicians
appear as pop stars and, to put it polemically, pop stars as politicians. Political
ideas and convictions are no longer negotiated, but rather marketed. Politics
serves more and more exclusively to generate images and legitimizes itself through
these images. Politics as knowledge, as idea and decision seems to grow increasingly
insignificant, while politics as an emotionally charged and thus hollow symbolic
event in media presence becomes more and more important.
Ausgeträumt..., Photo: Pez Hejduk
In this context, discussions of theses such as Francis Fukuyama's "The End
of History" appear to be a symptom of uncertainty. There seems to be no alternative.
Nothing is essentially changing in the basic structure of western society. And
the rest of the world has hardly any other option than to adapt to this western
basic structure.
Július Koller, Photo: Pez Hejduk
In recent years, there has been a
vehement discussion of formulating new fields of action, particularly also in
the field of art. Yet it is not so much a matter of formulating new utopias, but
rather of rethinking one's own position, our dependency on the contexts in which
we move, developing models for how the discourse could be redefined and reconquered
in the sense of pragmatic interests. Another question is how the symbolic level
could be repossessed and how the uncanny alliance between the symbolic and the
emotional in the field of politics could be dismantled, in order to resist the
hollowing out of the political field. Against the background of the historical,
programmatic context of the Secession, which made a conscious break with the past
in its foundation and set itself the goal of formulating visions for the future
at the same time, the exhibition "Ausgeträumt" will deal with these
questions.
Florian Hecker, Photo: Pez Hejduk
The exhibition will not be able
to give art its freedom, nor pave the way out of the current political and cultural
situation. Instead, it will bring together international positions of twenty artists,
who are able to maintain a potential for confrontation and a search for alternatives
in light of the dilemma, question ideological and economic mechanisms, discuss
utopia as an integral component of art, and topicalize the development of other
categories of imaging.
PUBLICATION
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AUSGETRÄUMT...
94 pages, numerous b/w illustrations, insert: CD Florian Hecker
contributions: Egon Bondy, Rike Frank, Boris Groys, Hakan Gürses, Matthias
Herrmann, Reni Hofmüller, Julius Koller, Joanna Mytkowska, Diana Nenadic,
Oswald Oberhuber, Roman Ondak, Carola Platzek, Kathrin Rhomberg, Ruth Sonderegger,
Branka Stipancic, Friedrich Tietjen, Daniela Hammer-Tugendhat, Trinh T. Minh-Ha,
Igor Zabel, Luise Ziaja
Secession 2002, ISBN 3-901926-38-0
___________________
Available in the
shop
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Curated by Kathrin Rhomberg
EXHIBITION DISCUSSION
November 2001 in pursuit of the exhibition "Ausgeträumt...": Henriette
Heise & Jakob Jakobsen (Copenhagen Free University), Joanna Mytkowska and
Adam Szymczyk (Galeria Foksal, Warschau) as well as Igor Zabel (curator of the
Moderna Galerija Ljubljana) met for a discussion with curator Kathrin Rhomberg.
* There is no translation for the German word "Ausgeträumt"
existing in English. In simple words "Ausgeträumt" means something
like "out of dreams", "disenchanted" or "decidedly stopped
dreaming".
For further information and photographic material please contact:
Tamara Schwarzmayr
Secession, Association of Visual Artists Vienna Secession
Friedrichstraße 12, 1010 Vienna
Tel: +43-1-5875307-21, Fax: +43-1-5875307-34
presse@secession.at