Documentation
www.secession.at/ziegler
Mel Ziegler, stuffed, 2003, Secession 2003
Mel Ziegler has been one of the most consistent proponents of an expanded in-situ
concept since the nineties. In his projects that are located in both exhibition
spaces and urban spaces, he explores how the circumstances of public life and
social space are reflected in the architecture and "design" of cities.
At the same time, his work focuses on the question of the hidden historical and
social-political manifestations of representation. In order to reveal and manipulate
these, Mel Ziegler uses the most diverse materials to create complex reference
systems, in which individual and collective history converge.
Mel Ziegler, stuffed, 2003, Secession 2003
His project
stuffed is situated not only in the Galerie of the Secession,
but also in various places of business in the city center of Vienna. It examines
the potentials of meaning inherent to display cases and showcases, as well as
their different presentation contexts in museums, exhibition spaces and shopping
zones, including the concomitant attributions of value and circumstances of ownership.
Mel Ziegler, stuffed, 2003, Secession 2003
Mel Ziegler furnishes the exhibition rooms at the Secession with a number of Biedermeier
showcases and cabinets from the Imperial Court Furniture Depot. The display furniture,
which is now public property as part of a collection, is placed with the display
side facing the wall, so that the cases reject their original function of presentation
and become exhibition objects themselves.
Mel Ziegler, stuffed, 2003, Secession 2003
Against the social history background of a general retreat to the private sphere,
the home was the most important area of Biedermeier culture (1815-1848). The industrialization
that arose during the Biedermeier era not only made an increase of private property
possible for a broader segment of the population, but with the offers of (mass)
goods instead of production on order, it also led to a changed culture of consumption,
which still predominates today. For the bourgeoisie, which became increasingly
prosperous after the Napoleonic Wars, yet was still kept at a distance from political
influence, furniture provided a means of displaying one's property. Whereas the
taste of the bourgeoisie was still oriented to that of the aristocracy, resulting
in collections of mementos, porcelain, glass and other luxury goods, a countermovement
of acquisition took place on the side of the imperial court: Biedermeier, which
came into full bloom in Austria, is the only style of furnishing that was adopted
by the aristocracy.
Mel Ziegler, stuffed, 2003, Secession 2003
These parameters of the furniture's historical circumstances - the interlocking
of property with private and public spaces of representation - are also the central
point of reference for the second part of the project, which has been realized
in the city center of Vienna, as indicated by both a wall text and the extensive
online documentation.
Mel Ziegler, stuffed, 2003, City Vienna, Don Gil, Secession
2003
Mel Ziegler has placed roughly fifty contemporary display cases from the stores
of various museums of Vienna in numerous places of business in the Vienna city
center (Kärnterstrasse, Graben and side streets). The basis for this translocation
was Ziegler's observation that displays and showcases are not only an essential
element of the language of museums and exhibition houses, but also feature significantly
in the image of the city (center) and the shopping zone, especially in Vienna.
Mel Ziegler, stuffed, 2003, City Vienna, Lobmeyer, Secession
2003
The museum display cases are integrated in shop windows and filled to the brim
with straw. Showcases that are already there in the shops are filled with straw
in the same way. The straw, which is golden, yet virtually worthless and strangely
out of place with its rural connotations, questions the normativity of value attributions
that go hand in hand with a presentation within the world of consumption and commodities.
It hinders looking into the presentation space, where the products that are otherwise
displayed are found, and it calls attention to the furniture itself in a way that
is comparable with the display cases facing the wrong way in the Secession. At
the border between advertising and exhibiting, the question remains open as to
whether the display cases are commodity goods or art works. Mel Ziegler demonstrates
the conjunctions and intersections of commodity and art presentation and thus
negotiates the associated issues of originality, authenticity and distinction
in the discussion of site-specific art.
Mel Ziegler, stuffed, 2003, City Vienna, Lanz Trachten, Secession
2003
PUBLICATION
A catalogue (German/English) will be published for the exhibition with a text
by Hedwig Saxenhuber.
Mel Ziegler, stuffed, 2003, City Vienna, L'Occitane, Secession
2003
PUBLICATION
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MEL ZIEGLER
32 pages, 103 colored illustrations, 5 b/w illustrations
authors: Matthias Herrmann, Hedwig Saxenhuber, Mel Ziegler
Secession 2003, ISBN 3-901926-59-3
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available in the
shop |
MEL ZIEGLER, born in 1956, lives and works in Austin; Solo
exhibitions (selection): 2002 Without Time / Without Temperature, Fri-Art Kunsthalle,
Freiburg; 2001 Doug Lawing Gallery, Houston; 2000 Paula Cooper Gallery, New York;
1999 Artpace, San Antonio; 1998 Come and Go, Spaces, Cleveland; Growing Concern,
Canadian Center for Architecture, Montreal; 1997 Arts Club of Chicago; Group Exhibitions
(selection): 2001 Basics, Kunsthalle Bern; Museum as Subject, Osaka National Museum;
Mapping Art and Science, Tang Museum, Saratoga Springs; Loudly Minimal, Quietly
Baroque, Blue Star Art Space, San Antonio; 2000 Museum as Muse, Museum of Modern
Art, New York; Out of the Ordinary, Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston
In-Situs Secession: Matthias Herrmann
In-Situs City: Leona Scull-Hons, Mel Ziegler
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