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Stephan Dillemuth

    Stephan Dillemuth - regulär 10 Euro, ermäßigt 5
    Akademie
    Stephan Dillemuth
    Self-Organized
    • Self-Organized

      • 168pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      The current economic situation and society’s low confidence in its institutions demands that artists become more imaginative in their self-organization. If labels such as ‘alternative,’ ‘non-profit’ and ‘artist-run’ dominated the self-organized art scene of the late nineties, the separatist position implied by the use of these terms has been moderated during the intervening years. This new anthology of accounts from the frontline includes contributions by artist practitioners as well as their institutional counterparts providing a fascinating account of the art world as a matrix of positions where the balance of power and productivity constantly shifts. Artists, curators and critics discuss empirical and theoretical approaches from Europe, Africa and South and North America on how self-organization today oscillates between the self and the group, self-imposed bureaucratization and flexibility, aestheticization and activism.

      Self-Organized
    • Stephan Dillemuth

      • 136pages
      • 5 heures de lecture

      This catalogue illustrates Stephan Dillemuth?s elaborate solo show at the Künstlerhaus, Halle für Kunst & Medien, Graz, through installation photographs as well as texts by art historian Kerstin Stakemeier and theorist Helmut Draxler. The exhibition presented newly conceived works alongside works from the 1980s exhibited for the first time. Dillemuth?s paintings, sculptures, video projections, and assemblages are brought together as a theatrical social group. Plaster-cast limbs appear unexpectedly from the ceiling, enmeshed within clock cogs or combined with boars? heads, cattle ears, and deer feet. Dillemuth?s Bayernbilder (1979) were inspired by sentimental and trivial postcard motifs from Bavarian spa towns. In Schönheitsgalerie (1985), featuring over fifty works, Dillemuth explores questions of representation. His gallery turns against the idea of external beauty and how it is represented in art. The paintings, like the faces, develop a life of their own through the process of painting, which makes it possible to see a new kind of?beauty.? Works that Dillemuth produced in the late 1980s in Chicago, exhibited for the first time, resemble disco decorations, and glitter in the light of a video projection. Is disco a?theater of cruelty??an ecstatic place where all images, whether ugly or beautiful, mean or seductive, are transcendent?00Exhibition: Künstlerhaus, Halle für Kunst & Medien, Graz, Austria (22.04.-11.06.2017).0

      Stephan Dillemuth