The Vienna Insurance Group Collections
May 8–October 6, 2024
Curated by Philippe Batka and Vanessa Joan Müller
Unknown Familiars brings together six collections of companies of the Vienna Insurance Group and Wiener Städtische Versicherungsverein, which encounter each other, their different focuses and histories of development, for the first time. It is in this regard that they are “unknown familiars”—related, though with never having met before. The collections now complement each other in a precise selection of works, the presentation of which occupies an entire floor of the Leopold Museum, comprising over two hundred works of various genres from different periods. Young, contemporary art meets the modernism of the interwar period; the avant-garde of the 1970s meets contemporary Austrian positions. Starting out from the collection of the Czech Kooperativa—represented with a selection of works from the period from 1900 to 1950—a network of thematic and stylistic references unfolds, which continues in dialogue and selective overlap with the works from the other collections.
Together with the BTA Baltic collection, the Austrian collections cover a broad spectrum from classical modernism to current contemporary practices. Wiener Städtische Versicherung’s collection includes works from the classical modern period—a era that is also well represented in the Leopold Museum—and also extends through the 20th century to more recent works by artists living in Vienna. The BTA Baltic collection starts directly in the present day. The Serbian Wiener Städtische osiguranje, on the other hand, primarily looks back to the subversive and conceptual Yugoslavian avant-garde in the latter half of the 20th century. With works in a range of media, Unknown Familiars presents its significant representatives, who are still less well known in Western Europe.
Surrealist works, such as those by TOYEN, form the atmospheric junction for a curatorial approach that continues into the present day. Surrealism can be found in numerous objects in the show, regardless of when they were created. It forms the invisible prism of the exhibition, allowing the various collections to appear in unexpected bundles across art-historical periods and media. Sustained by an associatively designed exhibition route and a display by Robert Müller that is conveyed through modernist forms, Unknown Familiars lifts some of the cornerstones of the familiar view of art in favour of an encounter with the new, placing the familiar—the familial—in an unfamiliar perspective.
The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue in which the curators Philippe Batka and Vanessa Joan Müller take an in-depth look at a total of around one hundred artistic positions.
With works by
Iris Andraschek, Markus Bacher, Abdul-Sharif Oluwafemi Baruwa, Anna-Sophie Berger, Ana Bešlić, Herbert Boeckl, Hugo Boettinger, Erich Boltenstern, Nenad Bračić, Mira Brtka, Josef Čapek, Milena Čubraković, Radomir Damnjanović Damnjan, Dei Leči (Bora Vitorac, Dragan Pavlov), Svenja Deininger, Tanja Deman, Braco Dimitrijević, Béatrice Dreux, František Drtikol, Melanie Ebenhoch, Albin Egger-Lienz, Judith Fegerl, Bedřich Feigl, Stanislav Filko, Emil Filla, Heinz Frank, Johannes Gierlinger, Birke Gorm, Jaroslav Grus, Nilbar Güreş, Otto Gutfreund, Julia Haller, Ines Höllwarth, Lisa Holzer, Vojtěch Hynais, Miloš Jiránek, Martha Jungwirth, Barbara Kapusta, Luisa Kasalicky, Gustav Klimt, Oskar Kokoschka, Jiří Kolář, Július Koller, Daniela Kostova, Pravoslav Kotík, Brigitte Kowanz, Bohumil Kubišta, František Kupka, Simon Lehner, Kris Lemsalu, James Lewis, Niklas Lichti, Maria Theresia Litschauer, Luiza Margan, Soshiro Matsubara, Dóra Maurer, Assunta Abdel Azim Mohamed, Alfons Mucha, František Muzika, Elena Narbutaitė, Zoran Naskovski, Fritzi Nechansky-Stotz, Matthias Noggler, Jaromír Novotný, Oswald Oberhuber, Hermann Josef Painitz, Neša Paripović, Sarah Pichlkostner, Evelyn Plaschg, Zoran Popović, Mathias Pöschl, Jan Preisler, Vojtěch Preissig, Antonín Procházka, Vladan Radovanović, Astrid Rausch, Jörg Reissner, Anja Ronacher, Jakub Schikaneder, Miriam Stoney, Jindřich Štyrský, Maria Szeni, Sophie Thun, František Tichý, Philipp Timischl, Dragoljub Raša Todosijević, TOYEN, Valentina Triet, Marianne Vlaschits, Veljko Vujačić, Martin Walde, Max Weiler, Lois Weinberger, Edin Zenun