Jewish museum in Austria exhibits anti-Semitic
objects to provoke debate
Photo: Anti-Semitic
salt and pepper shakers are displayed, Oct. 20, 2005, as part of an
exhibit on anti-Semitic items at the Jewish Museum in Hohenems,
western Austria.
HOHENEMS, Austria- The exhibit in
the basement of the Jewish museum has the feel of a cozy antique shop
or an old-fashioned apartment. But a closer look at the paintings,
paperweights, pipes and other knickknacks reveals something chilling:
They are all anti-Semitic, featuring large, crooked noses and other
unflattering caricatures of Jews. Curator Hanno Loewy went for the
comfortable, homey look with a purpose - to unsettle visitors and get
them thinking. "These objects were part of a certain coziness. They
were meant to be cozy," he said. "It takes three to five minutes, and
then people realize it's not cozy at all. The disturbance they feel
when they realize that themselves is much more effective than if we
were to put up a sign saying, 'This is dangerous.' " On display are
580 objects from the collection of Gideon Finkelstein, a Jew who
bought anti-Semitic items over 15 years. Though the objects dating
from 1880 to 1920 are nothing more than "kitschy knickknacks," they
were a way for their original owners to exert power over Jews, whom
they perceived as threatening, Loewy said. "They are in a way
transforming a fantasy of something dangerous into something you could
control," he said. Among the most eye-catching displays is a
fairground shooting stand depicting a Jew and a ferocious dog. By
hitting the target, shooters set off a mechanism that sets the dog on
the Jew, who uses an umbrella in an attempt to fend off the attack. In
a separate room, visitors can listen to an interview in which
Finkelstein says he considers it important to save these items because
they show just how widespread anti-Semitism was long before Nazi
leader Adolf Hitler rose to power. "In the 80 years before Hitler,
people in Germany, in Austria, in France, lived with anti-Semitism in
their everyday lives," Finkelstein says in the presentation. "When
someone like Hitler came and brought anti-Semitism to a climax,
everything was already prepared. And I think it's important to show
that."
The exhibit, which runs through Feb. 26, is the first public
display of the Finkelstein collection. In his interview for museum
visitors, Finkelstein says modern anti-Semitism is expressed in other
forms. "Today, there are books, there is the Internet, there are many
other ways to disseminate propaganda like this," he warns. Such means
are explored in another exhibit room, dubbed the Rumour Kitchen.
Visitors open cupboards and drawers to find mini-exhibits illustrating
modern anti-Semitism. One cupboard is devoted to Mel Gibson's film The
Passion of the Christ, which some Jewish organizations objected to for
fear it would cause bad blood between Christians and Jews. Another
drawer, labelled "Remove the cover! What teachers don't like to hear,"
contains a copy of a note with anti-Semitic jokes recently passed
around among girls in a nearby school. Scribbled in childish
handwriting are statements such as: "When something doesn't suit us
Nazis, a Jew will be gassed!" followed by a smiley face. A Jewish
heritage museum might be expected to avoid this subject in fear of
conveying a message that promotes rather than criticizes
anti-Semitism. But to Loewy, anti-Semitism is a topic "Jewish museums
can't avoid if you don't merely present a Judaica silver collection,
and I don't want to do that." "It doesn't help to stick the head into
the sand and pretend that this is not around," he said. In 1860,
Hohenems, a town of 14,000 people near Austria's western border with
Switzerland, had a vibrant Jewish community of 560.
Today, only Loewy
and a handful of other Jews live here. The town has an unusual
relationship to its Jewish roots because its Jewish community had
largely dissolved before the Second World War. That means the
Holocaust is not "the overshadowing one aspect of history that
dominates everything else," said Loewy, who moved to the town from
Germany in 2004. "Hohenems has a more positive connotation to the
descendants than other German or Austrian or Polish places do," he
said. "This is a factor that makes it easier to make interesting
projects here." American descendants of Hohenems' Jews have formed a
150-member group that supports the museum. Uri Taenzer of Moorestown,
N.J., secretary-treasurer of the American Friends of the Jewish Museum
Hohenems, praised the exhibit, saying it combats anti-Semitism by
"exposing and demonstrating some of this stupidity that gave rise to
anti-Semitism." "If the exhibit reminds people of how ignorant
anti-Semitism can be, then it helps," he said in a telephone
interview. -By S. lauf
Shopping
Christmas at two London galleries
Acid Drops & Sugar Candy is
a sweet and sour response to Christmas. Each of the 45 participating
artists has made twin works that are split between two galleries,
although it’s difficult to tell the nice from the nasty. At
Transition the work is arranged in a frieze, while Fosterart have
gone for the salon style. Both shows are made up of bite-size
artworks - mostly painting – some of which make you feel as though
investing in art is as easy as any other shopping experience. Worth
looking out for are Zoe Mendleson’s delicate, illustrative paintings
on board, Keira Bennett’s watercolour dogs, and Isabel Young’s court
jester. Other interesting works (which also stand out because they
haven’t adopted the Christmas theme) are Stephen Harwood’s Elizabeth
Peyton-style portraits and Paul Murphy’s customised porn playing
cards. If this show doesn’t get you into the Christmas spirit, it’ll
get you shopping.

Wild Strawberry, 2005. From Acid
Drops. Oil on Canvas. 40 x 30cm, by
Anna Bjerger.

Harvest,
2005. From Acid Drops. Pencil, Oil, household Paint and varnish on
board. 20.5 x 15cm, by
Zoe Mendelson.

Eclipse,
2005. From Acid Drops. Oil on found painting. 31 x 23cm,
by Jeff
McMillan.

Zmas Mummy and Daddy. From Acid Drops.
35cm x 35cm. Oil and mixed media on canvas,
by
Jasper Joffe.

Christmas Lights. From Sugar Candy. 30 x
30cm, by
Gary McDonald.
"Gauguin and Impressionism"
2005-12-18 until 2003-03-26
Kimbell Art Museum
Fort Worth,
TX, USA
This
winter the Kimbell Art Museum presents Gauguin and Impressionism, the
first-ever comprehensive survey of Paul Gauguin’s early career. The
exhibition will be on view at the Kimbell—its only American venue—from
December 18, 2005, to March 26, 2006. All of the great French artists
normally known as Post-Impressionists exhibited with the
Impressionists, but the involvement of Cézanne and Seurat in the
movement was slight compared to that of Gauguin. He contributed to
five of the eight Impressionist exhibitions—more than either Renoir or
Sisley—and was the most active artist-collector of Impressionist
paintings after Caillebotte. Gauguin and Impressionism demonstrates
both that he was an Impressionist and that he was a brilliant and
highly original one.
The exhibition and its scholarly catalogue deal
with the full range of the artist’s participation in the Impressionist
movement: the paintings he submitted to the Impressionist
exhibitions, the ways in which his extensive private collection
inspired his own work, and his interactions with Pissarro, Degas,
Cézanne, Monet, and other members of the Impressionist group.
Presenting the subtle and beautiful works of roughly the first half
of Gauguin’s career—from 1875 to 1887—the exhibition will confirm the
increasing appreciation of the young Gauguin’s importance as an
Impressionist painter, as well as his status, together with Degas, as
the most innovative sculptor of the group. Commented Dr. Timothy
Potts, director of the Kimbell Art Museum, “It is rare today that an
exhibition on an artist as well known and popular as Gauguin can claim
to present a largely unknown but central aspect of his achievement.
Yet it is just this sort of revelation that Gauguin and Impressionism
promises to bring, spotlighting for the first time his critical impact
as a painter and sculptor of Impressionism, and bringing together
nearly all of the major works he presented in the group’s exhibitions.
These years represent Gauguin at his most searching, challenging, and
vigorous, responding as he was to the challenge of his fellow
Impressionists’ innovations. It is fascinating to see how many of the
distinctive qualities of the later Gauguin from the Pacific—including
his boldly original approach to composition and his predilection for
areas of bright, almost flat, color—emerge already in this period.
The exhibition marks a major step forward in scholarship and, equally
importantly, does so through an experience that is a rare delight for
the eye.” Gauguin and Impressionism has been organized by the Kimbell
Art Museum and the Ordrupgaard, Copenhagen, and is curated jointly by
Dr. Richard R. Brettell, one of the world’s foremost scholars of
Impressionism and modern painting, and Anne-Birgitte Fonsmark,
director of the Ordrupgaard, Copenhagen. Among his many distinguished
contributions to the study of Impressionism and Post-Impressionism,
Dr. Brettell was one of the organizers of the monumental Gauguin
retrospective at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, the Art
Institute of Chicago, and the Grand Palais, Paris, in 1988–89. Fonsmark
has made a particular study of Gauguin’s sculpture and ceramics, and
in 1996 published a scholarly catalogue of the ceramics at the Ny
Carlsberg Glyptotek, where she was formerly a curator. The Kimbell is
also proud to announce that Gauguin’s Nave Nave Mahana (Delightful
Day) of 1896, today the most important Gauguin in a French public
collection, will be a “guest of honor” at the Kimbell throughout
Gauguin and Impressionism, on loan from the Musée des Beaux Arts de
Lyon. This masterpiece of the artist’s second stay in Tahiti will
give visitors to the exhibition the opportunity to see first-hand
where Gauguin’s restless experimentation and intense ambition within
the avant-garde would ultimately lead him.
Paul Gauguin was introduced to the Impressionist
circle by Camille Pissarro and contributed important works to five of
the eight Impressionist exhibitions between 1880 and 1886. During
these years he transformed himself from an amateur artist working as a
banker-stockbroker into a full-fledged professional, from a family man
into a solitary searcher after artistic, moral, and spiritual truths.
When Gauguin began his painting career, Impressionism was still in
the full bloom of youth and the dominant avant-garde movement in
French art. At first, as though retracing the artistic road that had
led to the movement, the young Gauguin turned for guidance and
inspiration to its precursors, particularly Jean-Baptiste-Camille
Corot. Although he had been developing a distinctively modern style
since 1873, it was only in 1879 that he began to develop a truly
Impressionist technique, using brushstrokes applied with apparent
speed and spontaneity to record scenes from modern life and fleeting
effects of light and weather. He did so under the tutelage of
Pissarro, his first real teacher and the only one whose guidance he
accepted, and seems to have had no difficulty assimilating what the
older artist taught him. In his Impressionist works Gauguin grappled
with the thorniest issues debated by the French avant-garde in the
cafés of Paris and its suburbs in the 1870s and 1880s. No member of
the Impressionist group created works as enigmatic or as wide-ranging,
both artistically and emotionally. What Gauguin did was ceaselessly
to question the nature of Impressionism itself. He asked questions of
a movement that was itself always asking questions about the nature
and role of art in modern society.
Gauguin’s sculptural works are crucial to the understanding
of his development during his Impressionist period, and indeed his
activities in this area were often even more searching and radical
than his early paintings. After making his debut with a couple of
traditional marble busts, he moved on to a revolutionary series of
woodcarvings––made between 1880 and 1884, often in a “dialogue” with
Degas—in which he experimented with deliberate stylization, mixed
materials, and polychromy. While Degas seems to have exhibited only
one sculpture in his lifetime (the famous Little Dancer Aged
Fourteen), Gauguin showed three-dimensional works at all the
Impressionist exhibitions in which he participated (1879, 1880, 1881,
1882, 1886). His ceramics, which he staunchly regarded as sculpture
rather than decorative art, were the most revolutionary works of all.
In the winter of 1886–87, inspired by the primal, unspoiled qualities
that he found in Oriental and Precolumbian pottery, he created a
number of ceramics in which he challenged the decadent eclecticism
into which he thought the potter’s art had fallen in the West. He
described these boldly innovative works as the results of “my great
madness.” Gauguin and Impressionism follows Gauguin’s career to 1887,
the year after the final Impressionist exhibition, when—working far
from Paris, in Brittany and Martinique—he began the artistic
transformations through which he became the great Post-Impressionist
with whom we are more familiar today, the creator of “primitive” and
exotic images replete with symbolic meaning. The achievements of his
later career in the South Seas have, until recently, overshadowed the
body of extraordinarily subtle and beautiful works that he produced
earlier. The exhibition offers an overdue reassessment and
celebration of his involvement with the Impressionist movement.
Gauguin and Impressionism brings together a fuller and more
spectacular selection of works from this period of his career than
ever before. It comprises over 50 paintings and 15 sculptures and
ceramics on loan from museums and private collections around the
world. They include a remarkable group of works from the Ny Carlsberg
Glyptotek in Copenhagen, among them the most ambitious and intriguing
of the early works, the Nude Study (Woman Sewing) of 1880. When
Gauguin showed this large figure painting in the Impressionist
exhibition of 1881, he could never have suspected that the great
writer Joris-Karl Huysmans would make it the subject of a long and
passionate essay—the most elaborate piece of writing inspired by a
single work in any of the Impressionist exhibitions, even including
Seurat's A Sunday On La Grande Jatte (Art Institute of Chicago) and
Renoir's Luncheon of the Boating Party (Phillips Collection,
Washington). It made Gauguin's career as an Impressionist and had a
profound effect on the work of artists like Pissarro and Renoir, whose
figure paintings were to dominate the Impressionist exhibition of the
following year. Other lenders to the exhibition include the Musée
d’Orsay, Paris; the National Gallery of Art, Washington; the Art
Institute of Chicago; the Courtauld Institute of Art, London; the
Philadelphia Museum of Art; the Rudolf Staechelin Family Foundation,
Basel; the Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid; the
Wallraf-Richartz-Museum, Cologne; the Nasjonalgalleriet, Oslo; and the
Fine Arts Museum, Budapest. Gauguin and Impressionism has been
organized by the Kimbell Art Museum and the Ordrupgaard, Copenhagen.
It is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts
and the Humanities. Promotional support for this exhibition in Fort
Worth is provided by American Airlines, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram,
and NBC5. Prior to its presentation at the Kimbell, Gauguin and
Impressionism is the inaugural exhibition in the newly built
exhibition galleries at Ordrupgaard, Copenhagen (August 25–November
20, 2005).
IMAGE:
Paul Gauguin, Nude Study (Woman Sewing), 1880, oil on canvas.
NY Carlsberg Glyptotek, Copenhagen
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"At the same time somewhere else... Melik
Ohanian, Pia Rönicke, Sean Snyder"
2005-12-17 until 2006-02-19
Fruitmarket Gallery
Edinburgh, United Kingdom

The Fruitmarket Gallery’s Christmas exhibition
brings together work by Melik Ohanian, Pia Rönicke, and Sean Snyder.
The methodology used by these three artists has much in common, from
their inclusion of elements of their working process in the
presentation of the finished work, to their persistent questioning
of the distinction between factual and fictional information in the
telling of a story. Conceptual Art and the tradition of the
documentary in TV, film and photography are twin starting points for
each artist’s search for a new visual language. Their work draws on
20th century cinematography, on journalism and the style of the
documentary, and their practice combines research with a much more
subjective and even poetic point of view. Based across Europe and
working internationally in a variety of media and about diverse
topics, an interest in the structures that define and reflect our
society runs through these artists’ practices.
These structures include both the physical –
the built environment with which we are surrounded – and the more
internalised - the information that shapes our understanding of the
world in which we live. Melik Ohanianshows his new film Punishment
Park, a poetic work with a violent undertone. The work takes its
title from British filmmaker Peter Watkins’ film from 1971, a pseudo
documentary shot in the desert of southern California. Watkins’s
film imagines a fictional ‘Punishment Park’, a desert camp where
convicts are stripped of all humanity and legal rights in the name
of ‘homeland security’. Ohanian projects this film onto the desert
at night, and re-shoots it. But while the story of the film is
closer to reality today than could have been imagined when it was
made, in the artist’s hands it becomes almost abstract.
Pia Rönickealso presents new work. The Zone is
a video shot in the outskirts of the Danish city Aarhus, in a
so-called ‘development zone’. While the protagonists, a team of
architects who have recently won a planning competition for a vast
housing complex for the area, are essentially acting themselves, the
film is staged and shot according to cinematographic conventions.
Rönicke often mixes recorded film and sound with drawings, collages
and animations, which visually confront ideas with the lived reality
of human life, or different architectural and urbanist ideologies.
The latter can be seen in another of her works Urban Fiction(2003),
which consists of a series of posters made from drawings and a
video.
Sean Snydershows a series
of new works with connections to the war in Iraq. His source
material includes various media releases and reports, some purchased
directly from media agencies such as Associated Press, others
recorded by amateurs. Snyder uses the material to examine the nature
of the media, and his work documents more than the events and places
witnessed. The Site, which consists of text and photographic prints,
brings together overlapping media accounts and visual evidence from
the site of Saddam Hussein’s capture. It conveys a rather abstract
sense of the reality behind the reports.
MAGE
Pia Rönicke
The Zone, 2005
"War: the Prints of Otto
Dix"
2005-12-17 until 2006-04-30
National Gallery of Australia
Canberra, AC, Australia

War: the prints of Otto Dix opens at the
National Gallery of Australia on Saturday 17 December. Der Kreig
[War] 1924 is a series of 51 etched prints that will be showcased
in the exhibition, documenting Otto Dix’s experiences in the First
World War. It has been described as one of the most powerful and
the most unpleasant anti-war statements in modern art. "I did not
paint war pictures in order to prevent war. I would never have
been so arrogant. I painted them to exorcise the experience of
war. All art is about exorcism." - Otto Dix
Otto Dix was born in 1891
in Untermhausen, Thuringia, the son of an ironworker. He initially
trained in Gera and at the Dresden School of Arts and Crafts as a
painter of wall decorations, and later taught himself how to paint
on canvas. He volunteered as a machine-gunner during the First
World War and in the autumn of 1915 was sent to the Western Front;
he was at the Somme during the major allied offensive of 1916.
During the war he was wounded a number of times, once almost
fatally. War profoundly affected Dix, and as an artist he took
every opportunity, both during his active service and afterwards,
to document his experiences. These experiences would become the
subject matter of many of his later paintings, and are central to
the Der Krieg cycle. Explaining why he volunteered for the army in
the First World War, Dix said: ‘I had to experience how someone
beside me suddenly falls over and is dead and the bullet has hit
him squarely. I had to experience that quite directly. I wanted
it. I’m therefore not a pacifist at all – or am I? Perhaps I was
an inquisitive person. I had to see all that myself. I’m such a
realist, you know, that I have to see everything with my own eyes
in order to confirm that it’s like that. I have to experience all
the ghastly, bottomless depths of life for myself.’ Dix
consciously modelled Der Krieg on Goya’s equally famous and
devastating Los Desastres de la Guerra [The disasters of war],
first published in 1863. This work detailed Goya’s account of the
horrors of the Napoleonic invasion and the Spanish War of
Independence from 1808 to 1814. While Dix’s work certainly
documents the horrors of war, there is a paradoxical quality of
sensuousness about it, an almost perverse delight in the rendering
of horrific detail, which indicates that there was perhaps, in
Dix’s case, an almost addictive quality to the hyper-sensory input
of war – something that would be familiar to any war
correspondent.
IMAGE
Otto Dix
'Sturmtruppe geht unter Gas vor [Stormtroops advancing under gas]'
1924 etching, aquatint,
Collection of the National Gallery of Australia,
The Poynton Bequest
2003 © Otto Dix, Licensed by VISCOPY, Australia
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