K08 :: Emancipation and Confrontation
Beginning 8 July 2008, the Austrian Federal Province of Carinthia, together with nine Carinthian art institutions, presents the first comprehensive major exhibition on contemporary art and architecture in Carinthia under the title “K08 :: Emancipation and Confrontation – Art from Carinthia from 1945 to the Present.”
The exhibition will offer a representative cross-section of art developments from 1945 to the present in the areas of painting, sculpture, architecture, photography, and video. Another focal point of this show is art in public space, tying into the project “Hermits – Cosmopolitans: Modern Painting in Carinthia from 1900 to 1955,” which was realized in 2004.
K08 :: Emancipation and Confrontation documents how a new generation of artists set out on new paths after 1945 and explores the development of art in the immediate present. In addition to painting and sculpture, photography, video, and installation art have grown in significance and will be presented accordingly. Many artists from Carinthia, such as Hans Bischoffshausen, Josef Dabernig, Günther Domenig, Ines Doujak, Johann Fruhmann, Bruno Gironcoli, Wolfgang Hollegha, Franco Kappl, Kurt Kocherscheidt, Kiki Kogelnik, Cornelius Kolig, Maria Lassnig, Meina Schellander, and Heimo Zobernig, all the way up to the younger generation including Gudrun Kampl, Roland Kollnitz, Eric Kressnig, and Katarina Schmidl, have left their mark on art history beyond Carinthia as well.
Curated by Silvie Aigner, this show will present over one hundred artists in nine Carinthian art institutions.
Klagenfurt
+ Museum of Modern Art Carinthia
+ Art Association Carinthia - Künstlerhaus Klagenfurt
+ Napoleonstadel – Carinthia’s House of Architecture
+ City of Klagenfurt – public space
+ Alpen Adria Gallery
Bleiburg + Werner Berg Museum
Saag by Velden + Kelag Power Station Forstsee
Einöde by Villach + [kunstwerk] krastal
Ossiach + Ossiach Monastery
Nötsch im Gailtal + Museum of the Nötsch Circle
Carinthian galleries have also joined in this large scale exhibition as partners: Galerie 3, Galerie Gmünd, Galerie am Himmelberg, Galerie Magnet, Galerie Unart, Galerie Vorspann, Galerie Sikoronja, Ritter Gallery and Galerie Judith Walker; in solo and group exhibitions during the exhibition K08:: Emancipation and Confrontation – Art from Carinthia from 1945 to the Present, they will document the artistic potential of Carinthian artists
With a survey of the development of art from 1945 to the present, the Museum of Modern Art Carinthia is the heart of this major exhibition. The turn to abstract painting is documented with works by Hans Bischoffshausen, Johann Fruhmann, Wolfgang Hollegha, Arnulf Rainer, Hans Staudacher, and others. In addition, the path from figuration to the abstract language of forms is traced with a number of graphic works. Examples of sculptures from Fritz Wotruba’s master class, such as works by Otto Eder, Anton Marcolin, and Hanak’s student Othmar Jaindl, demonstrate the rise of sculpture to an internationally acclaimed avant-garde. This leads into the presentation of the Carinthian artists like Hans Bischoffshausen, Kiki Kogelnik and Maria Lassnig, who sought a confrontation with the international avant-garde after World War II and settled in Vienna, Paris, or New York. When Bruno Gironcoli from Carinthia took over the master class for sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, this marked the beginning of a new era, which was accompanied by the inclusion of new materials and an expansion and transformation of the concept of sculpture. This development is represented with individual positions from Carinthia. Painting from the 1980s and 90s is presented with works by Giselbert Hoke, Gustav Januš, Kurt Kappa Kocherscheidt, Peter Krawagna, Valentin Oman, Wolfgang Walkensteiner, Reimo Wukounig, and others. This is followed by a contemporary section, leading from the essential trends of the 90s up to the present. Artists such as Ernst Logar, Claus Prokop, Heiko Bressnik and Birgit Pleschberger exemplify the interweaving of sculpture and painting with photography, film, and installation. Textile materials are increasingly used in the area of sculpture as a means of expression in more recent object art, presented through works by artists such as Gudrun Kampl, Barbara Bernsteiner, and Edith Payer.
The castle chapel forms the framework for an installation by the artist Johannes Domenig.
Within the framework of the exhibition, the Art Association Carinthia in the Künstlerhaus Klagenfurt will present the young and the middle generation, whose work is closely linked with an intermedia strategy in between object, photography, and new media. Central to this are the works of Meina Schellander and Inge Vavra, who formulated a connection between spatial discourse, graphic art, photography, and object art at an early stage and are regarded as pioneers of this trend in Carinthia. Starting from their work, individual artists have been invited to conceive installations for the house, including young artists like Luisa Kasalicky, Anja Manfredi, and Katarina Schmidl, as well as artists from the middle generation like Ines Doujak, Roland Kollnitz, and Nicole Six&Paul Petritsch. In the small gallery the film "Aquarena" (2007) by Josef Dabernig und Isabella Hollauf will be shown. The exhibition documents that many artists from Carinthia have influenced the contemporary context of the Austrian art scene and are important beyond this region. They live and work largely outside Carinthia. In this way, the Art Association Carinthia once again lives up to its role as a platform and exhibition house for the manifold trends within Austrian art. The presentation in the Künstlerhaus Klagenfurt supplements and extends the individual examples of contemporary art in the Museum of Modern Art Carinthia. Both houses are thus placed in communication with one another and play a central role within the exhibition. Hubert Lobnig and Birigit Knoechl will develop installations for the Alpen Adria Gallery of Klagenfurt.
Under the aspect of “transfer,” the Napoleonstadel – Carinthia’s House of Architecture will show both project conceptions and realized buildings by Carinthian architects in Carinthia and outside Carinthia, as well as architecture in Carinthia by international architectural firms, thus also presenting competition activities within the federal province. The selected projects include work by architects such as Ortner&Ortner, Franz Erhard Walther, and the architectural firm of Loudon&Habeler, currently awarded the Building Prize of the Province of Carinthia. From the pool of architects originating from Carinthia, the exhibition will also focus on current projects by architects who are either from Carinthia or have a strong tie to Carinthia. These include BEHF/Vienna, BKK3/Vienna, Günther Domenig/Graz, feld72/Vienna, Heidulf Gerngroß/Vienna, Volker Giencke/Graz, Günther Domenig XLGD/Paris, Manfred Kovatsch/Munich, Herbert Missoni – Team A Graz/Graz, nonconform/Vienna, Gruppe RATAPLAN/Vienna, SHARE/Vienna, and others.
The concept for the exhibition is by SHARE architects ZT KEG, who have developed an unusual and surprising presentation for the 21 projects shown.
Two projects by Jochen Traar will be realized in the urban space of Klagenfurt.
In conjunction with K08, the Werner Berg Museum in Bleiburg, founded in 1968, shows selected works by Werner Berg, which exemplify his formally stringent conception of pictures. Starting from these works, the reception of the geometric style after 1945 will be outlined on the basis of works by Hans Bischoffshausen, Johann Fruhmann, and Kiki Kogelnik. The continuity of concrete trends, which has usually been neglected in documentations of Austrian art, is presented by K08 for the first time with a selection of contemporary artists from Carinthia from Marianne Bähr, Manuel Knapp, Edgar Knoop, Eric Kressnig, Ferdinand Penker, Zorka L-Weiss, and Gertrude Weiss-Richter to Heimo Zobernig.
The Kelag Power Station Forstsee in Saag by Velden shows two solo presentations by Carinthian artists: Elke Maier and Gernot Fischer-Kondratovitch.
In the sculpture center [kunstwerk] krastal in Einöde by Villach the focus will naturally be on stone sculpture works. The selection of works by the artists of the association for the sculpture house was based on one aspect that has substantially defined contemporary stone sculpture: going beyond the material and the crossover to other media such as photography and painting. Constructivist pedestal correspondences by Katja N. Busse, machine-genetic sculptures by Herbert Golser, stone sutures and material adaptations by Michael Kos, and head extensions by Meina Schellander document relevant, artistic expansions to the classical material of stone. Other sculptural works from the [kunstwerk] krastal sculpture pool show a theme rarely associated with stone sculpture: change and movement. Visitors can also receive information about the symposiums regularly conducted by the [kunstwerk] krastal, thus gaining insights into the activities of the sculpture association.
In cooperation with the Carinthian Summer and the Music Academy, works by visual artists will also be shown for the first time in the newly adapted rooms of the Ossiach Monastery in 2008. The ceramic objects and wall installations by Gerold Tusch allude to the Baroque furnishings of the monastery, whereas, in accordance with the use of the house, the focus of the other in-situ works is on an artistic intention oriented towards the perception of sound and musical noises. Tomas Hoke and Cornelius Kolig work here with the sounds of the body, integrating breathing and heartbeat sounds in their objects. The artist duo Ramacher & Einfalt will create an installation with painting and sound objects in the entrance foyer.
The Museum of the Nötsch Circle in Nötsch im Gailtal celebrates its tenth anniversary in 2008. In honor of this occasion and in conjunction with the exhibition K08, the museum presents art trends that show a continuity with the painters of the Nötsch Circle and represent a picture conception grounded in an intensive use of materials and a strong painterly style. These include artists such as Franz Grabmayer and Karl Stark. In addition, representatives of a younger generation will be shown in Nötsch, who formulate new, contemporary approaches in the area of landscape painting and figurative depiction. This exhibition includes works by Alex Amann, Helga Druml, Guido Katol, Markus Orsini-Rosenberg, Richard Klammer, Johann Feilacher and Alina Kunitsyna.
Essential trends in art are described in the context of their art historical background, and the protagonists are presented with crucial works. The publication also provides an appreciation of Carinthia’s contribution to modern architecture and art in public space for the first time. Projects are presented in an exemplary way, and the preconditions specific to Carinthia are critically analyzed. Numerous color illustrations, short biographies of the artists, and historical surveys offer a profound insight into the development from 1945 to the present.
Graphic design: Leopold Šikoronja
With essays by Silvie Aigner, Irmgard Bohunovsky-Bärnthaler, Nicola Hirner, Christian Kravagna, Andreas Krištof, Eva Maltrovsky, Hedwig Saxenhuber, Franz Smola, Hemma Schmutz, Florian Steininger, Elisabeth Voggeneder, Christine Wetzlinger-Grundnig
With essays by Friedrich Achleitner, Fritz Breitfuß, Sonja Gasparin, Beny Meyer, Theresia Hauenfels, Otto Kapfinger, Klaura & Kaden, Eberhard Kraigher, Gernot Kulterer, Dietmar Müller, Karin Tschavgova, Reinhold Wetschko
The exhibition will be accompanied by a supplementary program, which will be announced on the website www.k08.at .
Mag. Silvie Aigner
Glockengasse 28/18, 1020 Vienna
E kuratorin@k08.at
Scholarly and curatorial cooperation for the exhibition section from 1955 to 1980 at the Museum of Modern Art Carinthia and at the Werner Berg Museum
Dr. Elisabeth Voggeneder
Curatorial cooperation for the exhibition at the Napoleonstadel – Carinthia’s House of Architecture
Prof. Otto Kapfinger, Arch. Gernot Kulterer/DI Dietmar Müller/Arch. Harald Weber, DI Karoline Seywald, spado, Arch. Reinhold Wetschko, SHARE architects ZT KEG
Mag. Christina Werner
w.hoch.2wei Cultural Project Management
Breite Gasse 17/4, 1070 Vienna
T +43 1 524 96 46-22
F +43 1 524 96 32
E werner@kunstnet.at
Adults € 14,00
Adults KulturCard 20% € 11,20
Senior Citizens €10,50
Children age 8 and up, students,
persons inmilitary or community service € 8,80
Family ticket 2 adults + 2 children € 8,50
Groups of 10 or more € 10,50
Location Burggasse 8/Domgasse, 9020 Klagenfurt
Opening Matinee Sun., 6 July 2008, 11 am
Exhibition 8 July to 2 November 2008
Opening Hours Tue. to Sun. and holidays, 10 am to 6 pm, Thur. 10 am to 8 pm
Admission € 8,00
Reduced Admission for KulturCard holders, senior citizens, children age 8 and up, students, persons in military or community service, groups of 10 or more
Location Goetheplatz 1, 9020 Klagenfurt
Opening Sun., 6 July 2008 (time to be announced)
Exhibition 8 July to 2 November 2008
Opening Hours Tue. to Sun., 10 am to 6 pm
Admission € 4,00
Reduced Admission for KulturCard holders, senior citizens, children age 8 and up, students, persons in military or community service, groups of 10 or more
Location St. Veiter Ring 10, 9020 Klagenfurt
Opening Sun., 6 July 2008 (time to be announced)
Exhibition 8 July to 2 November 2008
Opening Hours to be announced
Admission Free
And the
Location Theaterplatz 3, 9020 Klagenfurt
Opening Sun., 6 July 2008 (time to be announced)
Opening Hours Tue. to Sun., 10 am to 6 pm
Admission Free
Location 10.-Oktober-Platz 4, 9150 Bleiburg
Opening Sat., 28 June 2008, 11 am
Exhibition 29 June to 2 November 2008
Opening Hours Tue. to Sun., 10 am to 6 pm
Admission € 8,00
Reduced Admission for KulturCard holders, senior citizens, children age 8 and up, students, persons in military or community service, groups of 10 or more (see www.k08.at )
Location Saag 15, 9220 Techelsberg
Solo Presentation Elke Maier: Interweaving
Opening Thur., 29 May 2008, 6 pm
Exhibition 30 May to 27 July 2008
Solo Presentation Gernot Fischer-Kondratovitch:
Small World – Large Place
Opening Thur., 31 July 2008 (time to be announced)
Exhibition 1 August to 28 September 2008
Opening Hours May, June, September: Tue. to Sun., 10 am to 6 pm, and July, August: daily 10 am to 6 pm
Admission Free
Location Krastalerstraße 24, 9541 Einöde bei Villach
Opening Sun., 29 June 2008 (time to be announced)
Exhibition 3 July to 31 August 2008
Opening Hours Thur. to Sun., 2 pm to 7 pm
Admission Free
Location Ossiach 1, 9570 Ossiach
Opening Sun., 29 June 2008 (time to be announced)
Exhibition 1 July to 31 August 2008
Opening Hours Tue. to Sun., 10 am to 6 pm
Admission Free
Location Haus Wiegele Nr. 39, 9611 Nötsch im Gailtal
Opening Sun., 29 June 2008, 11 am
Exhibition 1 July to 2 November 2008
Opening Hours Tue. to Sun., 10 am to 6 pm
Admission € 4,00
Reduced Admission for KulturCard holders, senior citizens, children age 8 and up, students, persons in military or community service, groups of 10 or more
The exhibition will offer a representative cross-section of art developments from 1945 to the present in the areas of painting, sculpture, architecture, photography, and video. Another focal point of this show is art in public space, tying into the project “Hermits – Cosmopolitans: Modern Painting in Carinthia from 1900 to 1955,” which was realized in 2004.
K08 :: Emancipation and Confrontation documents how a new generation of artists set out on new paths after 1945 and explores the development of art in the immediate present. In addition to painting and sculpture, photography, video, and installation art have grown in significance and will be presented accordingly. Many artists from Carinthia, such as Hans Bischoffshausen, Josef Dabernig, Günther Domenig, Ines Doujak, Johann Fruhmann, Bruno Gironcoli, Wolfgang Hollegha, Franco Kappl, Kurt Kocherscheidt, Kiki Kogelnik, Cornelius Kolig, Maria Lassnig, Meina Schellander, and Heimo Zobernig, all the way up to the younger generation including Gudrun Kampl, Roland Kollnitz, Eric Kressnig, and Katarina Schmidl, have left their mark on art history beyond Carinthia as well.
Curated by Silvie Aigner, this show will present over one hundred artists in nine Carinthian art institutions.
The exhibition project covers the following locations:
Klagenfurt
+ Museum of Modern Art Carinthia
+ Art Association Carinthia - Künstlerhaus Klagenfurt
+ Napoleonstadel – Carinthia’s House of Architecture
+ City of Klagenfurt – public space
+ Alpen Adria Gallery
Bleiburg + Werner Berg Museum
Saag by Velden + Kelag Power Station Forstsee
Einöde by Villach + [kunstwerk] krastal
Ossiach + Ossiach Monastery
Nötsch im Gailtal + Museum of the Nötsch Circle
Carinthian galleries have also joined in this large scale exhibition as partners: Galerie 3, Galerie Gmünd, Galerie am Himmelberg, Galerie Magnet, Galerie Unart, Galerie Vorspann, Galerie Sikoronja, Ritter Gallery and Galerie Judith Walker; in solo and group exhibitions during the exhibition K08:: Emancipation and Confrontation – Art from Carinthia from 1945 to the Present, they will document the artistic potential of Carinthian artists
Location Klagenfurt
With a survey of the development of art from 1945 to the present, the Museum of Modern Art Carinthia is the heart of this major exhibition. The turn to abstract painting is documented with works by Hans Bischoffshausen, Johann Fruhmann, Wolfgang Hollegha, Arnulf Rainer, Hans Staudacher, and others. In addition, the path from figuration to the abstract language of forms is traced with a number of graphic works. Examples of sculptures from Fritz Wotruba’s master class, such as works by Otto Eder, Anton Marcolin, and Hanak’s student Othmar Jaindl, demonstrate the rise of sculpture to an internationally acclaimed avant-garde. This leads into the presentation of the Carinthian artists like Hans Bischoffshausen, Kiki Kogelnik and Maria Lassnig, who sought a confrontation with the international avant-garde after World War II and settled in Vienna, Paris, or New York. When Bruno Gironcoli from Carinthia took over the master class for sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, this marked the beginning of a new era, which was accompanied by the inclusion of new materials and an expansion and transformation of the concept of sculpture. This development is represented with individual positions from Carinthia. Painting from the 1980s and 90s is presented with works by Giselbert Hoke, Gustav Januš, Kurt Kappa Kocherscheidt, Peter Krawagna, Valentin Oman, Wolfgang Walkensteiner, Reimo Wukounig, and others. This is followed by a contemporary section, leading from the essential trends of the 90s up to the present. Artists such as Ernst Logar, Claus Prokop, Heiko Bressnik and Birgit Pleschberger exemplify the interweaving of sculpture and painting with photography, film, and installation. Textile materials are increasingly used in the area of sculpture as a means of expression in more recent object art, presented through works by artists such as Gudrun Kampl, Barbara Bernsteiner, and Edith Payer.
The castle chapel forms the framework for an installation by the artist Johannes Domenig.
Within the framework of the exhibition, the Art Association Carinthia in the Künstlerhaus Klagenfurt will present the young and the middle generation, whose work is closely linked with an intermedia strategy in between object, photography, and new media. Central to this are the works of Meina Schellander and Inge Vavra, who formulated a connection between spatial discourse, graphic art, photography, and object art at an early stage and are regarded as pioneers of this trend in Carinthia. Starting from their work, individual artists have been invited to conceive installations for the house, including young artists like Luisa Kasalicky, Anja Manfredi, and Katarina Schmidl, as well as artists from the middle generation like Ines Doujak, Roland Kollnitz, and Nicole Six&Paul Petritsch. In the small gallery the film "Aquarena" (2007) by Josef Dabernig und Isabella Hollauf will be shown. The exhibition documents that many artists from Carinthia have influenced the contemporary context of the Austrian art scene and are important beyond this region. They live and work largely outside Carinthia. In this way, the Art Association Carinthia once again lives up to its role as a platform and exhibition house for the manifold trends within Austrian art. The presentation in the Künstlerhaus Klagenfurt supplements and extends the individual examples of contemporary art in the Museum of Modern Art Carinthia. Both houses are thus placed in communication with one another and play a central role within the exhibition. Hubert Lobnig and Birigit Knoechl will develop installations for the Alpen Adria Gallery of Klagenfurt.
Under the aspect of “transfer,” the Napoleonstadel – Carinthia’s House of Architecture will show both project conceptions and realized buildings by Carinthian architects in Carinthia and outside Carinthia, as well as architecture in Carinthia by international architectural firms, thus also presenting competition activities within the federal province. The selected projects include work by architects such as Ortner&Ortner, Franz Erhard Walther, and the architectural firm of Loudon&Habeler, currently awarded the Building Prize of the Province of Carinthia. From the pool of architects originating from Carinthia, the exhibition will also focus on current projects by architects who are either from Carinthia or have a strong tie to Carinthia. These include BEHF/Vienna, BKK3/Vienna, Günther Domenig/Graz, feld72/Vienna, Heidulf Gerngroß/Vienna, Volker Giencke/Graz, Günther Domenig XLGD/Paris, Manfred Kovatsch/Munich, Herbert Missoni – Team A Graz/Graz, nonconform/Vienna, Gruppe RATAPLAN/Vienna, SHARE/Vienna, and others.
The concept for the exhibition is by SHARE architects ZT KEG, who have developed an unusual and surprising presentation for the 21 projects shown.
Two projects by Jochen Traar will be realized in the urban space of Klagenfurt.
The locations Bleiburg, Saag by Velden, Einöde by Villach, Ossiach, Nötsch im Gailtal
In conjunction with K08, the Werner Berg Museum in Bleiburg, founded in 1968, shows selected works by Werner Berg, which exemplify his formally stringent conception of pictures. Starting from these works, the reception of the geometric style after 1945 will be outlined on the basis of works by Hans Bischoffshausen, Johann Fruhmann, and Kiki Kogelnik. The continuity of concrete trends, which has usually been neglected in documentations of Austrian art, is presented by K08 for the first time with a selection of contemporary artists from Carinthia from Marianne Bähr, Manuel Knapp, Edgar Knoop, Eric Kressnig, Ferdinand Penker, Zorka L-Weiss, and Gertrude Weiss-Richter to Heimo Zobernig.
The Kelag Power Station Forstsee in Saag by Velden shows two solo presentations by Carinthian artists: Elke Maier and Gernot Fischer-Kondratovitch.
In the sculpture center [kunstwerk] krastal in Einöde by Villach the focus will naturally be on stone sculpture works. The selection of works by the artists of the association for the sculpture house was based on one aspect that has substantially defined contemporary stone sculpture: going beyond the material and the crossover to other media such as photography and painting. Constructivist pedestal correspondences by Katja N. Busse, machine-genetic sculptures by Herbert Golser, stone sutures and material adaptations by Michael Kos, and head extensions by Meina Schellander document relevant, artistic expansions to the classical material of stone. Other sculptural works from the [kunstwerk] krastal sculpture pool show a theme rarely associated with stone sculpture: change and movement. Visitors can also receive information about the symposiums regularly conducted by the [kunstwerk] krastal, thus gaining insights into the activities of the sculpture association.
In cooperation with the Carinthian Summer and the Music Academy, works by visual artists will also be shown for the first time in the newly adapted rooms of the Ossiach Monastery in 2008. The ceramic objects and wall installations by Gerold Tusch allude to the Baroque furnishings of the monastery, whereas, in accordance with the use of the house, the focus of the other in-situ works is on an artistic intention oriented towards the perception of sound and musical noises. Tomas Hoke and Cornelius Kolig work here with the sounds of the body, integrating breathing and heartbeat sounds in their objects. The artist duo Ramacher & Einfalt will create an installation with painting and sound objects in the entrance foyer.
The Museum of the Nötsch Circle in Nötsch im Gailtal celebrates its tenth anniversary in 2008. In honor of this occasion and in conjunction with the exhibition K08, the museum presents art trends that show a continuity with the painters of the Nötsch Circle and represent a picture conception grounded in an intensive use of materials and a strong painterly style. These include artists such as Franz Grabmayer and Karl Stark. In addition, representatives of a younger generation will be shown in Nötsch, who formulate new, contemporary approaches in the area of landscape painting and figurative depiction. This exhibition includes works by Alex Amann, Helga Druml, Guido Katol, Markus Orsini-Rosenberg, Richard Klammer, Johann Feilacher and Alina Kunitsyna.
A three-volume publication on the exhibition will be published by Springer Verlag.
Essential trends in art are described in the context of their art historical background, and the protagonists are presented with crucial works. The publication also provides an appreciation of Carinthia’s contribution to modern architecture and art in public space for the first time. Projects are presented in an exemplary way, and the preconditions specific to Carinthia are critically analyzed. Numerous color illustrations, short biographies of the artists, and historical surveys offer a profound insight into the development from 1945 to the present.
Graphic design: Leopold Šikoronja
Volume I
: Art from Carinthia from 1945 to the PresentWith essays by Silvie Aigner, Irmgard Bohunovsky-Bärnthaler, Nicola Hirner, Christian Kravagna, Andreas Krištof, Eva Maltrovsky, Hedwig Saxenhuber, Franz Smola, Hemma Schmutz, Florian Steininger, Elisabeth Voggeneder, Christine Wetzlinger-Grundnig
Volume II
: Architecture since 1945 and Art in Public Space TodayWith essays by Friedrich Achleitner, Fritz Breitfuß, Sonja Gasparin, Beny Meyer, Theresia Hauenfels, Otto Kapfinger, Klaura & Kaden, Eberhard Kraigher, Gernot Kulterer, Dietmar Müller, Karin Tschavgova, Reinhold Wetschko
Volume III
: English/SlovenianThe exhibition will be accompanied by a supplementary program, which will be announced on the website www.k08.at .
Curator
Mag. Silvie Aigner
Glockengasse 28/18, 1020 Vienna
E kuratorin@k08.at
Scholarly and curatorial cooperation for the exhibition section from 1955 to 1980 at the Museum of Modern Art Carinthia and at the Werner Berg Museum
Dr. Elisabeth Voggeneder
Curatorial cooperation for the exhibition at the Napoleonstadel – Carinthia’s House of Architecture
Prof. Otto Kapfinger, Arch. Gernot Kulterer/DI Dietmar Müller/Arch. Harald Weber, DI Karoline Seywald, spado, Arch. Reinhold Wetschko, SHARE architects ZT KEG
Press
Mag. Christina Werner
w.hoch.2wei Cultural Project Management
Breite Gasse 17/4, 1070 Vienna
T +43 1 524 96 46-22
F +43 1 524 96 32
E werner@kunstnet.at
Participating Art Institutions Information on the exhibition, the participating art institutions, admission prices
COMBINED TICKET FOR ALL ART INSTITUTIONS
Adults € 14,00
Adults KulturCard 20% € 11,20
Senior Citizens €10,50
Children age 8 and up, students,
persons inmilitary or community service € 8,80
Family ticket 2 adults + 2 children € 8,50
Groups of 10 or more € 10,50
Location Klagenfurt
MUSEUM OF MODERN ART CARINTHIA
Location Burggasse 8/Domgasse, 9020 Klagenfurt
Opening Matinee Sun., 6 July 2008, 11 am
Exhibition 8 July to 2 November 2008
Opening Hours Tue. to Sun. and holidays, 10 am to 6 pm, Thur. 10 am to 8 pm
Admission € 8,00
Reduced Admission for KulturCard holders, senior citizens, children age 8 and up, students, persons in military or community service, groups of 10 or more
ART ASSOCIATION CARINTHIA, KÜNSTLERHAUS KLAGENFURT
Location Goetheplatz 1, 9020 Klagenfurt
Opening Sun., 6 July 2008 (time to be announced)
Exhibition 8 July to 2 November 2008
Opening Hours Tue. to Sun., 10 am to 6 pm
Admission € 4,00
Reduced Admission for KulturCard holders, senior citizens, children age 8 and up, students, persons in military or community service, groups of 10 or more
NAPOLEONSTADEL – CARINTHIA’S HOUSE OF ARCHITECTURE
Location St. Veiter Ring 10, 9020 Klagenfurt
Opening Sun., 6 July 2008 (time to be announced)
Exhibition 8 July to 2 November 2008
Opening Hours to be announced
Admission Free
And the
CITY OF KLAGENFURT
as an exhibition location for works by Jochen Traar for art in public space.ALPEN ADRIA GALLERY
Location Theaterplatz 3, 9020 Klagenfurt
Opening Sun., 6 July 2008 (time to be announced)
Opening Hours Tue. to Sun., 10 am to 6 pm
Admission Free
Locations Bleiburg, Saag bei Velden, Einöde by Villach, Ossiach, Nötsch im Gailtal
WERNER BERG MUSEUM
Location 10.-Oktober-Platz 4, 9150 Bleiburg
Opening Sat., 28 June 2008, 11 am
Exhibition 29 June to 2 November 2008
Opening Hours Tue. to Sun., 10 am to 6 pm
Admission € 8,00
Reduced Admission for KulturCard holders, senior citizens, children age 8 and up, students, persons in military or community service, groups of 10 or more (see www.k08.at )
KELAG POWER PLANT FORSTSEE
Location Saag 15, 9220 Techelsberg
Solo Presentation Elke Maier: Interweaving
Opening Thur., 29 May 2008, 6 pm
Exhibition 30 May to 27 July 2008
Solo Presentation Gernot Fischer-Kondratovitch:
Small World – Large Place
Opening Thur., 31 July 2008 (time to be announced)
Exhibition 1 August to 28 September 2008
Opening Hours May, June, September: Tue. to Sun., 10 am to 6 pm, and July, August: daily 10 am to 6 pm
Admission Free
[KUNSTWERK] KRASTAL
Location Krastalerstraße 24, 9541 Einöde bei Villach
Opening Sun., 29 June 2008 (time to be announced)
Exhibition 3 July to 31 August 2008
Opening Hours Thur. to Sun., 2 pm to 7 pm
Admission Free
OSSIACH MONASTERY
Location Ossiach 1, 9570 Ossiach
Opening Sun., 29 June 2008 (time to be announced)
Exhibition 1 July to 31 August 2008
Opening Hours Tue. to Sun., 10 am to 6 pm
Admission Free
MUSEUM OF THE NÖTSCH CIRCLE
Location Haus Wiegele Nr. 39, 9611 Nötsch im Gailtal
Opening Sun., 29 June 2008, 11 am
Exhibition 1 July to 2 November 2008
Opening Hours Tue. to Sun., 10 am to 6 pm
Admission € 4,00
Reduced Admission for KulturCard holders, senior citizens, children age 8 and up, students, persons in military or community service, groups of 10 or more


K08 Emancipation and Confrontation (655,06 kB)