Drei Tage bis zum Ende der Kunst

Exhibition curated by Ana Dević/WHW Akademija Zagreb

FROM

27/05/20

UNTIL

15/06/20

Vlad Brăteanu, Tin Dožić, Bianca Hisse, Neža Knez, Jolanta Nowaczyk, Gaisha Madanova, Ekaterina Muromtseva, María Luisa Sanín Peña, Ivana Tkalčić

Exhibition can be viewed from outside every day.

Guided encounters
Twice a week, guided encounters are offered for smaller groups, by appointment;
Registration: ana.kovacic.whw@gmail.com.

Conference of the Birds, a sound broadcast made in collaboration with Ljubica Letinić, to be released by the end of June 2020 at Radio Student, Zagreb, as a part of the program Kulturizacija.

The exhibition Drei Tage bis zum Ende der Kunst is the result of a seven-month journey within the WHW Akademija module Conversation about the Trees (conceived and led by Ana Dević). Focusing on issues such as resistance, resilience, and collectivity, the module used the motif of trees and forests as a metaphor through which main lines of inquiry branched out into different topics and artistic practices, as found in the Kontakt Collection.

Developed during this moment of pandemic-induced isolation, the exhibition — which is the first act of the module—invites audiences to view it from the outside, on the other side of closed doors. The topics of dematerialization and being alone can be seen as a nod to numerous historical neo-avant-garde and conceptual artistic practices that looked for more autonomous ways of production and dissemination. In addition to this art historical dimension, the exhibition rethinks political ecologies, human-nonhuman relations, and materiality. Lastly, it claims a wider space to consider isolation from the perspective of environmental politics, the challenges wrought by inequalities and climate change, and art’s social responsibilities.

Cover picture: © María Luisa Sanín Peña

Borrowing its title from Mladen Stilinović’s text-based work Drei Tage bis zum Ende der Kunst (2002), which reflects on the philosophical conundrums of the idea of “the end of art,” the exhibition resonates with ongoing challenges of cultural production in the current context. Looking for gestures and strategies available and implementable in this situation of social foreclosure, the display turns the gallery into a “vitrine box” and a sort of a backstage area. Within this framework, the exhibition hosts recurring micro-actions, moving and still objects, texts, scores, and liminal in situ interventions, conceived as unrehearsed and intimate encounters in relation to and around the gallery space and its institutional framework. This proposition draws on the potentialities of an empty space and the physicalities and temporalities of (in)visibility, gesture, representation, distance, closeness, concealment, and revelation, to name just a few.

The second act of the module, called One on one, none on none, all in all, is an attempt by the WHW Akademija participants to get together while being displaced. The outcome is a collective walk, happening in both real and constructed spaces.

The concluding act of this tripartite program is a performative sound broadcast that delves into the allegorical poem Conference of the Birds by twelfth-century Persian poet Feriduddin Attar as staged for the theater by Peter Brook in 1979. The poem tells the story of a group of birds’ mythical quest for knowledge and truth. At the end of their journey, the exhausted birds meet their true sovereign—themselves, transformed—realizing that what they were searching for was already there all along. While rehearsing and performing the text together, the participants of WHW Akademija constructed a common language to share their hopes and frustrations. The illuminating verse at the end of the poem—about an open path with no guide nor any travelers—alludes to an open labyrinth that our voices try to navigate together.

WHW Akademija is realized in partnership with the Kontakt Collection, which focuses on experimental and neo-avant-garde art in Central, Eastern, and Southeast Europe from the late 1950s onward.

This program is presented as part of the two-year collaborative project Education from Below, conceived in collaboration with the Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten, Amsterdam, and MACBA – Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona.

WHW Akademija’s primary funders are Kontakt Collection / ERSTE Foundation and the Foundation for Arts Initiatives.

The program is also supported by:
European Commission’s Creative Europe program
Kultura Nova Foundation
Government Office for Cooperation with NGOs, Croatia
Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Croatia
City of Zagreb

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Florian Bauer

Director Social Finance, Sustainability and Innovation
Since 2023, Florian Bauer has been responsible for social finance, sustainability and social innovation at ERSTE Foundation. Prior to this role, Florian worked in the NGO & Social Entrepreneurship sector for more than 13 years. He led the Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Partnership (REEEP), an international multilateral NGO that works to accelerate market-based deployment of renewable energy and energy efficient systems in developing countries, and was Managing Director & COO of the Impact Hub Vienna. From 2020-2023, Florian established strategic alliances with key partners and helped to create innovative semantic technology solutions at Semantic Web Company (SWC), a leading IT company in semantic AI solutions.