Herzliche Einladung zu den Veranstaltungen der Städelschule!
Boris Groys: Politics of Installation
Wednesday, 1st July, 19h, Aula
Die Veranstaltung findet in englischer Sprache statt.
In “Politics of Installation”, Boris Groys considers the multilayered nature of the artist's sovereign will and the challenge posed to it by the fundamental act of exhibiting work to the public. Here, within the modernist notion of absolute artistic sovereignty, he identifies a short-circuit in the Western conception of freedom. This is simply because, in exhibiting work to the public (in the name of the public), the artist effectively justifies the place of his or her work in public discourse. The artwork's sovereignty is, in a sense, limited by the same process that allows it to exist as such. In order to recover this lost agency, Groys finds in installation practice a public space in which the artist's sovereign will can be reclaimed.
Boris Groys, Professor of Aesthetics, Art History, and Media Theory at HfG Karlsruhe and Global Professor at New York University, is a philosopher, art critic, curator, and media theorist. He published numerous books including „The Total Art of Stalinism“ (Princeton, 1992), „Über das Neue. Versuch einer Kulturökonomie“ (München, 1992), and “Art Power” (Cambridge, 2008), and “Thinking in Loop. Three video lectures” (Karlsruhe/Ostfildern 2008). He has curated the exhibitions “Dream Factory Communism” (Schirn Kunsthalle, 2004), “Privatisations”, at the KW (Berlin, 2004), “Total Enlightenment. Conceptual Art in Moscow 1960-1990” (Schirn, 2008) and “Medium Religion” (with Peter Weibel) at the ZKM (2009).
Friedrich Wolfram Heubach: Zur allgemeinen Debilisierung der Gesellschaft unter besonderer Berücksichtigung des Kunstbetriebs
Donnerstag, 2. Juli, 19 Uhr, Aula
Es wird zur Sprache kommen, wovon der Titel handelt.
Friedrich Wolfram Heubach gründete 1968 die legendäre Kunst/Künstler-Zeitschrift >interfunktionen<, deren Herausgeber er bis 1972 war; Nach der Habilitation im Fach Psychologie unterrichtete er bis 1989 an der Universität zu Köln und bis 1992 an der Hochschule für Bildende Künste, Hamburg; anschließend wechselte er auf den Lehrstuhl für Psychologie an der Kunstakademie Düsseldorf.
Seine wohl bekanntesten Veröffentlichungen sind (u.a.): Das bedingte Leben - Theorie der psychologischen Gegenständlichkeit der Dinge (München 1987) und Ein Bild und sein Schatten - Zum Bild der Melancholie und zur Erscheinung der Depression (Bonn 1996).
Diedrich Diederichsen: The Time and Space of Judgment
Friday, 3rd July, 19h, Aula
Die Veranstaltung findet in englischer Sprache statt.
This lecture addresses different concepts of criticism and distinguishes between 1) an endless processual criticality, 2) clear normative judgments and 3) a third version of criticism that can be traced back to those types of judgmental behaviors that deal with time-related events as in sport, music or other areas.
Diedrich Diederichsen is professor of Theorie, Praxis und Vermittlung von Gegenwartskunst of the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna.
Hochschule für Bildende Künste–Städelschule
Dürerstr. 10, 60596 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Freitag, 26. Juni 2009
Freitag, 19. Juni 2009
DANIEL BIRNBAUM / MARIE ANGE BRAYER
Herzliche Einladung zu den Veranstaltungen der Städelschule!
Daniel Birnbaum: The Critic and the Curator
Wednesday, 24th June, 19h, Aula
Die Veranstaltung findet in englischer Sprache statt.
What is the role of the art critic today? What is the role of the curator? Daniel Birnbaum gives some examples from recent projects.
Beside his rectorship and teaching at the Städelschule and his curatorial practice as director of Portikus Daniel Birnbaum has been involved in several biennials in recent years: in the 50th Venice Biennale, the Moscow Biennials and as a committee member of the International Foundation Manifesta. In 2008, he was co-curator of the Triennial of Yokohama and curator of the 2nd Triennial of Turin. In the period between 2006 and 2007, he co-curated Airs de Paris at the Centre Pompidou and of Uncertain States of America (with Hans-Ulrich Obrist) at Bard College of London’s Serpentine Gallery. A contributing editor of Artforum, he has published numerous books and essays on philosophy and art, including The Hospitality of Presence: Problems of Otherness in Husserl’s Phenomenology (1998), and, with Carsten Höller, Production (2000). His most recent publication is Chronology (2005) beside the numerous catalogues and publications in the framework of Städelschule and Portikus.
The Architecture Class presents:
Post-Medium Architecture – Public Lecture Series Summer Semester 2009
Marie Ange Brayer: Towards Machinic Environments: From Model to Machine
Thursday, 25th June, 19h, Aula
Alle Veranstaltungen der Architekturklasse finden in englischer Sprache statt.
The conceptual practices that emerged in the 1960s through radical architecture in Europe were linked to a networked society in which architecture is no longer a built object, but becomes an environment with which the individual interacts. Within these radical movements, from Archigram to Superstudio, architecture is adapted to all scales, from domestic to urban, in the temporality of the instant and the action. Constant developed „New Babylon“ in which architecture has become an « atmospheric machine ». Today information technologies networks and computational design understand architecture as a dynamic environment. Architecture implements new concepts in a complex living system where a calculated, « machinic » nature has replaced the representational or allegorical nature of the “model”.
Since 1996, Marie-Ange Brayer has been the director of the Centre Regional Contemporary Art Collection [FRAC, Centre] in Orléans, France, where the collection is channeled towards the linkage between art and research architecture. The FRAC centre has been putting together a collection on architecture in its utopian and experimental dimension, from the 1950s until the present day. She has curated ARCHILAB (2001 and 2002) and the French Pavilion at the 8th International Architectural Biennale in Venice (2002). She is currently working on a PhD at the EHESS (School of Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences) in Paris, retracing the legal status of the architectural model since the Renaissance, by way of a history of representation ("A model object, the architectural maquette"). In 2008 she was a co-curator of the exhibition « Youniverse », 3rd International Biennial of Contemporary Art of Sevilla, curated by Peter Weibel.
Daniel Birnbaum: The Critic and the Curator
Wednesday, 24th June, 19h, Aula
Die Veranstaltung findet in englischer Sprache statt.
What is the role of the art critic today? What is the role of the curator? Daniel Birnbaum gives some examples from recent projects.
Beside his rectorship and teaching at the Städelschule and his curatorial practice as director of Portikus Daniel Birnbaum has been involved in several biennials in recent years: in the 50th Venice Biennale, the Moscow Biennials and as a committee member of the International Foundation Manifesta. In 2008, he was co-curator of the Triennial of Yokohama and curator of the 2nd Triennial of Turin. In the period between 2006 and 2007, he co-curated Airs de Paris at the Centre Pompidou and of Uncertain States of America (with Hans-Ulrich Obrist) at Bard College of London’s Serpentine Gallery. A contributing editor of Artforum, he has published numerous books and essays on philosophy and art, including The Hospitality of Presence: Problems of Otherness in Husserl’s Phenomenology (1998), and, with Carsten Höller, Production (2000). His most recent publication is Chronology (2005) beside the numerous catalogues and publications in the framework of Städelschule and Portikus.
The Architecture Class presents:
Post-Medium Architecture – Public Lecture Series Summer Semester 2009
Marie Ange Brayer: Towards Machinic Environments: From Model to Machine
Thursday, 25th June, 19h, Aula
Alle Veranstaltungen der Architekturklasse finden in englischer Sprache statt.
The conceptual practices that emerged in the 1960s through radical architecture in Europe were linked to a networked society in which architecture is no longer a built object, but becomes an environment with which the individual interacts. Within these radical movements, from Archigram to Superstudio, architecture is adapted to all scales, from domestic to urban, in the temporality of the instant and the action. Constant developed „New Babylon“ in which architecture has become an « atmospheric machine ». Today information technologies networks and computational design understand architecture as a dynamic environment. Architecture implements new concepts in a complex living system where a calculated, « machinic » nature has replaced the representational or allegorical nature of the “model”.
Since 1996, Marie-Ange Brayer has been the director of the Centre Regional Contemporary Art Collection [FRAC, Centre] in Orléans, France, where the collection is channeled towards the linkage between art and research architecture. The FRAC centre has been putting together a collection on architecture in its utopian and experimental dimension, from the 1950s until the present day. She has curated ARCHILAB (2001 and 2002) and the French Pavilion at the 8th International Architectural Biennale in Venice (2002). She is currently working on a PhD at the EHESS (School of Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences) in Paris, retracing the legal status of the architectural model since the Renaissance, by way of a history of representation ("A model object, the architectural maquette"). In 2008 she was a co-curator of the exhibition « Youniverse », 3rd International Biennial of Contemporary Art of Sevilla, curated by Peter Weibel.
Dienstag, 16. Juni 2009
CHRISTOPH MENKE / GEORGE L. LEGENDRE
Herzliche Einladung zu den Veranstaltungen der Städelschule!
Talk
Christoph Menke: The Aesthetic Critique of Judgment
Response: Isabelle Graw/Daniel Loick
Wednesday, 17. June, 19h, Aula
Die Veranstaltung findet in englischer Sprache statt.
This talk will address the question of aesthetic judgment. It will shift the attention away from the usual fixation on criteria and focus instead on more fundamental questions, such as: what is the role of judgment in the aesthetic field? How do we judge in aesthetic matters and why do we judge at all? It is the aesthetic judgment itself that is presented as a problem full of paradoxes.
Christoph Menke is professor of philosophy at the University Frankfurt/Main. He is the author of seminal studies on aesthetic such as "Die Souveränität der Kunst: Ästhetische Erfahrung nach Adorno und Derrida" (1988) or "Die Gegenwart der Tragödie. Versuch über Urteil und Spiel" (2005). He also contributed to the debates around political philosophy, as with "Spiegelungen der Gleichheit" (2000) or "Philosophie der Menschenrechte" (2007). He regularly contributes to "Texte zur Kunst."
The Architecture Class presents:
Post-Medium Architecture – Public Lecture Series Summer Semester 2009
George L. Legendre: Surface Goodness
Thursday, 18. June, 19h, Aula
Alle Veranstaltungen der Architekturklasse finden in englischer Sprache statt.
Exploring the intersection between spaces, mathematics, and computation, George L. Legendre has developed a body of work that oscillates around the notion of “surface”. The literal and metaphoric meanings of the “superficial”, statements of computer programming syntax, indexical poetry, mathematical asides and descriptions of nemmerically controlled fabrication processes – all of which offer the very same thing: the surface as object of knowledge.
George L. Legendre is a London-based architect and educator. He graduated from Harvard Graduate School of Design in 1994 and served as lecturer and Assistant Professor of Architecture at the GSD from 1995 to 2000. Prior to founding IJP Corporation (IJP), his London-based office, he was visiting Professor at the ETH Zurich (2001), Princeton University (2003-05), and the Architectural Association in London, where he served as Unit Master of Diploma Unit 5 (2002-2008). His practice has just completed Henderson Waves, a 1000-foot-long bridge located in Singapore. In 2007, the influential UK weekly Building Design elected the 3-year-old office as one of the top 5 practices in Britain led by principals under the age of 40.
The work of George L. Legendre has been featured worldwide, most recently as the cover feature of AA Files 57 (London 2007), Architectural Review, and Icon Magazine (both London 2008). A regularly published essayist, George L. Legendre has written IJP:The Book of Surfaces, as well as Bodyline: the End of our Meta-Mechanical Body, and a Critical essay in Mathematical Form: John Pickering and the Architecture of the Inversion Principle (all AA Publications, 2003-06).
Talk
Christoph Menke: The Aesthetic Critique of Judgment
Response: Isabelle Graw/Daniel Loick
Wednesday, 17. June, 19h, Aula
Die Veranstaltung findet in englischer Sprache statt.
This talk will address the question of aesthetic judgment. It will shift the attention away from the usual fixation on criteria and focus instead on more fundamental questions, such as: what is the role of judgment in the aesthetic field? How do we judge in aesthetic matters and why do we judge at all? It is the aesthetic judgment itself that is presented as a problem full of paradoxes.
Christoph Menke is professor of philosophy at the University Frankfurt/Main. He is the author of seminal studies on aesthetic such as "Die Souveränität der Kunst: Ästhetische Erfahrung nach Adorno und Derrida" (1988) or "Die Gegenwart der Tragödie. Versuch über Urteil und Spiel" (2005). He also contributed to the debates around political philosophy, as with "Spiegelungen der Gleichheit" (2000) or "Philosophie der Menschenrechte" (2007). He regularly contributes to "Texte zur Kunst."
The Architecture Class presents:
Post-Medium Architecture – Public Lecture Series Summer Semester 2009
George L. Legendre: Surface Goodness
Thursday, 18. June, 19h, Aula
Alle Veranstaltungen der Architekturklasse finden in englischer Sprache statt.
Exploring the intersection between spaces, mathematics, and computation, George L. Legendre has developed a body of work that oscillates around the notion of “surface”. The literal and metaphoric meanings of the “superficial”, statements of computer programming syntax, indexical poetry, mathematical asides and descriptions of nemmerically controlled fabrication processes – all of which offer the very same thing: the surface as object of knowledge.
George L. Legendre is a London-based architect and educator. He graduated from Harvard Graduate School of Design in 1994 and served as lecturer and Assistant Professor of Architecture at the GSD from 1995 to 2000. Prior to founding IJP Corporation (IJP), his London-based office, he was visiting Professor at the ETH Zurich (2001), Princeton University (2003-05), and the Architectural Association in London, where he served as Unit Master of Diploma Unit 5 (2002-2008). His practice has just completed Henderson Waves, a 1000-foot-long bridge located in Singapore. In 2007, the influential UK weekly Building Design elected the 3-year-old office as one of the top 5 practices in Britain led by principals under the age of 40.
The work of George L. Legendre has been featured worldwide, most recently as the cover feature of AA Files 57 (London 2007), Architectural Review, and Icon Magazine (both London 2008). A regularly published essayist, George L. Legendre has written IJP:The Book of Surfaces, as well as Bodyline: the End of our Meta-Mechanical Body, and a Critical essay in Mathematical Form: John Pickering and the Architecture of the Inversion Principle (all AA Publications, 2003-06).
Dienstag, 2. Juni 2009
NINA MÖNTMANN
Herzliche Einladung zu den Veranstaltungen der Städelschule!
Nina Möntmann: How Art Institutions Can Create a Sense of Belonging
Wednesday, 10 June, 19h, Aula
Die Veranstaltung findet in englischer Sprache statt.
Nina Möntmann is a curator and writer who teaches as a Professor and Head of Department of Art Theory and the History of Ideas at the Royal University College of Fine Arts in Stockholm. From 2003 to 2006 she was Curator at the Nordic Institute for Contemporary Art (NIFCA) in Helsinki. She curated the Pavilion of the Republic of Armenia at the 52nd Biennial of Venice in 2007, the group exhibition „If we can’t get it together. Artists rethinking the (mal)function of communities“ for The Power Plant in Toronto (2008/09), and has been curatorial advisor for Manifesta 7 (2008). She is currently co-curating the „Jerusalem Show 2010“ together with Jack Persekian, and a new film project with Raqs Media Collective.
Möntmann is correspondent for Artforum, and contributed to Le Monde Diplomatique, Parachute, metropolis m, Frieze and others. Recent publications include „Manifesta 7 Companion Book“ (Rana Dasgupta, Nina Möntmann, Avi Pitchon eds., Milan 2008); „Art and its Institutions“ (London, Black Dog Publishing, 2006), Mapping a City (Nina Möntmann, Yilmaz Dziewior eds., Hatje Cantz, 2005), „Kunst als sozialer Raum“ (Walther König, Köln, 2002).
Nina Möntmann: How Art Institutions Can Create a Sense of Belonging
Wednesday, 10 June, 19h, Aula
Die Veranstaltung findet in englischer Sprache statt.
Nina Möntmann is a curator and writer who teaches as a Professor and Head of Department of Art Theory and the History of Ideas at the Royal University College of Fine Arts in Stockholm. From 2003 to 2006 she was Curator at the Nordic Institute for Contemporary Art (NIFCA) in Helsinki. She curated the Pavilion of the Republic of Armenia at the 52nd Biennial of Venice in 2007, the group exhibition „If we can’t get it together. Artists rethinking the (mal)function of communities“ for The Power Plant in Toronto (2008/09), and has been curatorial advisor for Manifesta 7 (2008). She is currently co-curating the „Jerusalem Show 2010“ together with Jack Persekian, and a new film project with Raqs Media Collective.
Möntmann is correspondent for Artforum, and contributed to Le Monde Diplomatique, Parachute, metropolis m, Frieze and others. Recent publications include „Manifesta 7 Companion Book“ (Rana Dasgupta, Nina Möntmann, Avi Pitchon eds., Milan 2008); „Art and its Institutions“ (London, Black Dog Publishing, 2006), Mapping a City (Nina Möntmann, Yilmaz Dziewior eds., Hatje Cantz, 2005), „Kunst als sozialer Raum“ (Walther König, Köln, 2002).
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