Exhibitions and visual arts archive

Scapegoat Society

Scapegoat Society

8 – 21 January 2010 | Guest Projects
Rainer Ganahl is one of eight international artists participating in Scapegoat Society, a multi-disciplinary exhibition exploring the role of the scapegoat in contemporary culture. Scapegoating is a hostile process in which people attempt to absolve ...
Social Sculpture

Social Sculpture

1 January – 5 April 2010 | Whitechapel Gallery
This ongoing exhibition throughout London’s Whitechapel Gallery features works of art which offer a space for contemplation or discussion. Diwan (or couch) by Austrian sculptor Franz West invites visitors to take a rest, have ...
Europe – Work in Progress

Europe – Work in Progress

5 – 30 November 2009 | Austrian Cultural Forum London
This photography exhibition, curated by Barbara Zeidler – co-founder of the Institut für Kulturresistente Güter, Vienna (Institute for culture-resistant goods) – explores the changes taking place in Europe twenty years after the fall of the ...
Travels in No-man’s-land

Travels in No-man’s-land

5 November – 30 December 2009 | Austrian Cultural Forum London
Twenty years after the fall of the Iron Curtain Austrian photographer Kurt Kaindl travelled along the former east/west border, from Lübeck in Germany to Triest in Italy, documenting and photographing the remnants of ...
CLOSEUP

CLOSEUP. Royal College of Art

26 September – 6 October 2009 | Royal College of Art
Ten years of European collaborative projects between new graduates of the Royal College of Art and industry partners across the EU in the area of people-centred design are to be featured in a major exhibition ...
In Praise of Shadows

In Praise of Shadows. EUNIC (European Union National Institutes for Culture) Design Project

17 – 29 September 2009 | Victoria & Albert Museum
Given the context of sustainability, lighting is being radically reconsidered and a major challenge for designers as well as an important issue for the public. Growing concern over energy use and changes in legislation provide ...

News

Austrian curator appointed at The Museum of Modern Art

Independent curator, author, and lecturer Sabine Breitwieser has been appointed Chief Curator of the Department of Media and Performance Art at The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York. Ms. Breitwieser, who from 1988 to 2007 served as founding Director and Curator of the Generali Foundation, a public contemporary art museum in Vienna, will begin her new position at MoMA on October 4.

Franziska Ullmann and Peter Ebner at Venice Architecture Biennale

Under the title, “People meet in architecture” the 12th Venice Architecture Biennale will take place from 29th August to 21st November 2010. Among the 43 international architects, engineers and artists, invited by the Biennale’s new Director, Japanese architect Kazuyo Sejima, feature Austrian architects Franziska Ullmann and Peter Ebner.

Read more

Rondo-Studios, Styria: Artist in Residence 2011

The Styrian Provincial Government is offering foreign scholarships to young free-lance artists in all fields from European and non-European countries for the year 2011. These scholarships will be awarded upon proposal by a jury. The deadline is May 31, 2010. More information is provided on www.kulturservice.steiermark.at

Read more

Curator for 54th Venice Biennale 2011 appointed

Minister of Culture Claudia Schmied appointed Eva Schlegel as curator of Austria's contribution to the 54th Venice Biennale 2011.

Read more

New MUMOK Director appointed

On 22 March 2010 German art historian Karola Kraus was appointed as new director of the Museum of Modern Art (MUMOK) in Vienna. Incumbent Director Edelbert Köb will resign on 1 October 2010.

Read more

Sculptor Bruno Gironcoli dies

Bruno Gironcoli was one of Austria's most important sculptors of recent times, best known as the creator of monumental, organic shapes and huge distorted replicas of domestic objects, covered in silver or gold paint.  He died in Vienna on 19 February 2010 at the age of 74.  Read the full obituary in the Independent by Marcus Williamson here.