January 30–April 10, 2016
Klosterwall 23
20095 Hamburg
Germany
Hours: Tuesday–Friday 12–6pm,
Saturday–Sunday 11am–6pm
T +49 40 322157
hamburg@kunstverein.de
50 Years Later: The dematerialization of the art object from 1966 to 2016 is a cross-reference show on the permanent state of transformation which surrounds us, focused on the so-called conceptual art that questions the world we live in. A world in which the old forms of work, of behavior, of art no longer fit and new forms have yet to be outlined.
Sarah Abu Abdallah, Heba Amin, Eleanor Antin, Darren Bader, Tyler Coburn, Simon Denny, Jason Dodge, Maria Eichhorn, Dora García, Liam Gillick, Melanie Gilligan, Goldin+Senneby, Pierre Huyghe, Roberto Jacoby, Hanne Lippard, Lee Lozano, Mathias Poledna, Mladen Stilinović, UBERMORGEN
The exhibition FLUIDITY surveys the history of “dematerialization,” from 1966 to 2016, expanding the scope of this term, beyond past political-conceptual strategies, to include the generation of “digital natives.” Society and artistic practices have transformed considerably over the past fifty years. Discussion about these changes—their impact on art, the associated political debates—is precisely what the Kunstverein in Hamburg seeks to ignite.
Conceptual art in the 1960s looked to dissolve the artwork as a material object, in favor of an art formed of ideas and concepts critical of the mechanisms of the market and the modernist canon. In turn, art of the 1990s used participation to reassess economic and institutional structures. Both movements promoted a “dematerialization” of art, intended to actively stimulate the spectator. This term was coined in 1968 by the curator and critic Lucy Lippard; in our highly mediated, digitally-networked world—a world arguably more fluid and dematerialized than ever before—it deserves re-reading. To this end, FLUIDITY juxtaposes art from both periods with conceptual work produced by a young generation of artists, who have developed new strategies and critical appraisals of today’s society.
By tracing “dematerialization” from the 1960s to the present, FLUIDITY reveals broader social tendencies and the ways they have been reflected in political art. These trends include the development of the neoliberal economy and the art market, the increasing “liquification” of both values and currencies, and the dematerialization of processes of work. Through this approach, the exhibition takes aim at the one-sidedness of recent debates on materiality and art. It also enables new discussion and critical reflection: on the contemporary conditions of representation—and the delineation of art as a field.
Curated by Bettina Steinbrügge (Kunstverein in Hamburg), Nina Möntmann (Royal Institute of Art, Stockholm), and Vanessa Joan Müller (Kunsthalle Wien). The exhibition is accompanied by artist talks with Heba Amin, Darren Bader, Tyler Coburn, Simon Denny, Jason Dodge, Hanne Lippard, and a book presentation by Goldin+Senneby. A reader will be published in association with the exhibition.
With friendly support of the Ministry of Culture of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg.
Press contact: presse [at] kunstverein.de / T +49 40 322158