OCTOBER 20, 2015 TO J ANUARY 10, 2016 JOSEPH CORNELL: WANDERLUST „Joseph Cornell: Wanderlust“ follows the Lucian Freud exhibition in 2013, and continues the series of retrospective surveys of modern masters at the Kunsthistsorisches Museum. While Freud’s work encouraged visitors to look again at paintings in the museum’s Picture Gallery, the objects of Joseph Cornell will focus our attention on its magnificent Kunstkammer. Joseph Cornell (1903 – 1972) was one of the most original and influential artists of the twentieth century. He received no formal artistic training, he could not draw, paint, or sculpt, and yet his work had a deep and lasting influence on subsequent generations of American artists, from Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns, James Rosenquist and Andy Warhol through the early practitioners of Minimalism to many still working today. Born and raised in Queens, New York, Cornell never once set foot outside his native country, and rarely strayed far from home. And yet, his knowledge of the world, and of Europe in particular, was astounding. The exhibition will examine in detail Cornell’s relationship with the continent of Europe, his knowledge and understanding of its culture, history and
9
Embed
OCTOBER 20, 2015 TO JOSEPH CORNELL: WANDERLUST · 2015. 8. 14. · OCTOBER 20, 2015 TO JANUARY 10, 2016 JOSEPH CORNELL: WANDERLUST „Joseph Cornell: Wanderlust“ follows the Lucian
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
OCTOBER 20, 2015 TO JANUARY 10, 2016
JOSEPH CORNELL: WANDERLUST
„Joseph Cornell: Wanderlust“ follows the Lucian Freud exhibition in 2013, and continues the series of retrospective surveys of modern masters at the Kunsthistsorisches Museum. While Freud’s work encouraged visitors to look again at paintings in the museum’s Picture Gallery, the objects of Joseph Cornell will focus our attention on its magnificent Kunstkammer. Joseph Cornell (1903 – 1972) was one of the most original and influential artists of the twentieth century. He received no formal artistic training, he could not draw, paint, or sculpt, and yet his work had a deep and lasting influence on subsequent generations of American artists, from Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns, James Rosenquist and Andy Warhol through the early practitioners of Minimalism to many still working today. Born and raised in Queens, New York, Cornell never once set foot outside his native country, and rarely strayed far from home. And yet, his knowledge of the world, and of Europe in particular, was astounding. The exhibition will examine in detail Cornell’s relationship with the continent of Europe, his knowledge and understanding of its culture, history and
geography, and his relationship with many of its key personalities. The exhibition’s title „Wanderlust“, acknowledges his restless imagination and ability to travel metaphorically through both place and time. Known as one of the greatest collectors of the twentieth century, Cornell created his own, private cabinet of curiosities every bit as fascinating and remarkable as those collected by the kings and emperors of Renaissance Europe. During the exhibition, a single vitrine of objects by Cornell will be placed within the museum’s Kunstkammer in order to underline and explore this affinity. Through his works – poetic assemblages made of the objects that he found in antiquarian bookshops, flea markets, dime stores and washed up on beaches – Cornell sought to understand the workings of the universe, and the minds of its greatest protagonists from the fields of science, literature, travel, ballet, theatre, music, cinema and art. Tracing the full arc of the artist’s remarkable life and career over more than forty years, the exhibition will show more than 80 works, from collages, films and early objects produced in the 1930s to the intricate box constructions for which the artist is best known. It will be the first survey of Joseph Cornell’s work ever to be presented in Austria, and the first major exhibition in Europe for more than thirty years. The exhibition has secured major loans from the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington DC, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC, Tate Modern, London, as well as from important private collections. It has been organised in collaboration with the Royal Academy, London and is co-curated by Jasper Sharp (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna) and Sarah Lea (Royal Aademy, London), in collaboration with academic advisor Lynda Roscoe Hartigan.
PRESS PHOTOGRAPHS
These images may be used free of charge when writing about the exhibition; to download them go to http://press.khm.at.
A 270-page, fully-illustrated catalogue accompanying the exhibition includes original essays by co-curators Jasper Sharp and Sarah Lea and internationally respected scholar Lynda Roscoe Hartigan, entries on each individual work and a detailed chronology of Cornell’s life and career compiled by Ben Street.
OPENING HOURS AND ENTRANCE FEES
Tuesdays – Sundays, 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Thursdays until 9 p.m. Annual Ticket € 34 Adults € 14 Vienna Card € 13 Concessions € 11 Children under 19 free Group ticket (p.p.) € 11 Audio guide (German/English) € 4
Buy your online-tickets at: https://shop.khm.at/en/ticket-shop/
PRESS CONTACT
Nina Auinger-Sutterlüty, MAS Head of Communication and Public Relations KHM-Museumsverband Wissenschaftliche Anstalt öffentlichen Rechts Burgring 5, 1010 Vienna T +43 1 525 24 - 4021 [email protected] www.khm.at