Koroška Gallery of Fine Arts, Slovenj Gradec
Koroška galerija likovnih umetnosti Slovenj Gradec
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− | + | ==The most repercussive exhibitions and events of just Slovenian authors== | |
==Collection== | ==Collection== |
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Koroška Gallery of Fine Arts, Slovenj Gradec
Koroška galerija likovnih umetnosti Slovenj Gradec
12 Jul 2021
31 Dec 2021
Slovenian contemporary visual arts exhibition We Live in Interesting Times, curated by Marko Košan, on the occasion of Slovenian Presidency of the Council of the European Union, coorganised by the Ministry of Culture, Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art Koroška in Slovenj Gradec, and the European Parliament,
13 Jun 2017
A presentation of the The Second Explosion - Slovene Art of the 1990s research project and book launch by artist and curator Tadej Pogačar and photographer Dejan Habicht, coorganised by the P.A.R.A.S.I.T.E. Institute, Koroška Gallery of Fine Arts and the educational program for young curators INCUBATOR,
8 Dec 2016
9 Dec 2016
Mateja Lazar of the Creative Europe Desk Slovenia (Motovila Institute) and Andreja Hribernik (Koroška Gallery of Fine Arts) at the Creative Georgia Forum
25 Oct 2013
1 Dec 2013
Transfer > Slowenien, a joint exhibition organised in the framework of an artists-in-residence exchange programme between Slovenia and Upper Bavaria also featuring works by Katja Felle, Jure Markota, and Uroš Weinberger (Koroška Gallery of Fine Arts),
19 Sep 2013
13 Oct 2013
The joint exhibition Augenräume - contemporary art from the Koroška region - by Zoran Ogrinc, Luka Popič, and Peter Hergold, and curated by Marko Košan (Koroška Gallery of Fine Arts),
The institution was established on ideas and endeavours similar to Arnold Bode idea of establishing Documenta in Kassel in 1955, so to create fine arts centre out of a rural town like Slovenj Gradec. First exhibition was in Slovenj Gradec lounched allready in 1954 and entitled Swedisch kitchen. Officialy was the gallery established in 1957 having its own exhibition space in old town hall on Glavni trg. In the year 1966 it was built the object, where the gallery operates and exhibits till nowdays. In the same year the gallery stared with the international programme establishing the gallery politic that soon came under the sponsorship of the United Nations and support international programme in 1966, 1975, 1979, 1985 and 1991.
"Slovenia was part of the then Socialist Yugoslavia, and only a skillful organiser could successfully have convinced the ruling elite in the town that the fine arts were precisely what was needed to elevate the town's reputation. The decision to invite the United Nations to take honorary patronage over the exhibitions proved to be appropriate, and it guaranteed the participation of renowned artists," wrote Milena Zlatar abote those pioneering perod of the gallery on the gallery web page and continuing that "participation in exhibitions in a socialist country represented a kind of challenge to some artists. One way or another, the exhibitions have opened Slovenj Gradec up to the world, and domestic fine art production has taken its place side by side with that from abroad." In the gallery there was exhibiting several famous stars of fifties and sixties, including Henry Moore, Ossip Zadkine, Victor Vassarely, Johny Friedlaender, etc.
In the year 1975 the French artist Daniel Buren was invited to Slovenj Gradec to participate at the international fine art exhibition - the outlined theme was Engaged Figuration - he chose a conceptual artistic engagement, as he placed his blue-white flag among other flags hanging in front of the gallery and announcing the participation of artists from different countries. In the seventies Slovenia still lived in the spirit of the more or less uncomprehended conceptual activity of the OHO group. Although one could no longer speak of the pioneering days of Slovene contemporary art, Slovene fine art criticism of the day did not take much interest in the work of the currently very famous French artist who created his installation in front of the Slovenj Gradec gallery. And beside numerous artists who exhibited more "classical" works in the gallery, there were still other conceptualists, like Pino Poggi with his AU Arte Utile Manifesto, which the artist claimed to be a graphic work with the functions of film and newspaper, and which entices the viewer to engage in constructive thinking. Or Braco Dimitrijević, an artist born in Sarajevo who only later acquired international acclaim, also participated at the exhibition with two documentary photographs.
In the 1979, the Slovenj Gradec international fine art exhibition opened some of the most topical issues of contemporary fine art again, and this time it was with the self-confident appearance of domestic selectors and their colleagues from abroad, as the contacts with the AICA international association and several foreign institutions were continually growing stronger. The exhibition exposed the problems of the socialisation of art and psycho-formation, it dealt with the peripheral areas of fine art, and touched upon the alternatives in contemporary architecture in the seventies - all this subjects were intended to stimulate a critical reflection in the context of fine art. Among the exhibitors was the Italian artist Ico Parisi, exhibiting 1976 on Venice Biennial. For Slovenj Gradec he constructed the Wall of Apocalypse in the hall of the Gallery; today this act is seen as a truly prophetic warning on modern communication and the addiction to electronic media.
This continuity was certainly also featured in the 1985 exhibition, when the subject of the exhibition was not defined, while the concept was only bound to the technique of woodcut and small sculpture in wood. The choice of traditional fine art materials also meant a return to the appreciation of the traditional aesthetic of fine art works, while the simultaneous international architectural invitation for a wooden family house, and the exhibition of the submitted projects, only confirmed this orientation. The author of the exhibition, art historian Stane Bernik, had already presented the same problems of residential architecture, with a particular emphasis on alternatives in modern architecture, at the 1979 exhibition.
Therefore it came as a logical decision that the 1985 exhibition concept was followed by the exhibition of works by Ossip Zadkine from the artist's collection in Paris. The exhibition took place in 1991. The sculpture Memorial to the Apologist of Cubism - the Poet Guillame Apollinaire (1937, bronze), which Zadkine presented as a gift to Slovenj Gradec at the first international fine art exhibition in 1966, was transferred from Paris - with the permission of the foundation - as late as 1990, and in the same year it took its place in the atrium of the gallery. But this was not the sole reason for the exhibition, wrote Milena Zlatar, Zadkine's exhibition meant a logical continuation of the exhibitions which emphasised traditional fine art practice, and one of the most important among them was certainly the exhibition of sculptures and graphic works by Henry Moore in 1979.
Towards the end of the nineties, before the preparations for the international fine art exhibition which this time was particularly animated by the active contribution of Slovenj Gradec in the non-governmental organisation of Cities - Messengers of Peace, the fact became prominent that the issue of the influence of urban surroundings on artists and their works needed to be reassessed.
"We did not primarily have in mind manifestations in specific urban space, known as open-air projects (although these are also included), but rather the incorporation of artists into living surroundings, their reactions here and now, conscious or unconscious," are words of Milena Zlatar, gallery director of many years', now curator dedicated mostly to gallery collection. "The theme of The Artist and an Urban Environment exhibition, therefore, seemed to be broad enough to allow for the incorporation of quality fine art works, including those whose creators did not reflect very profoundly or concretely on the issues of the contemporary urban world, but had allowed themselves to be driven by their own creative potential and the universal nature of fine art expression; our task remains, however, that even in such works we look for answers to such questions as: What is the role of artists in the urban environment, and how do artists respond to it? How much are they influenced by the specificity of a surrounding, or the cultural space, and what can they themselves give to it?"
Selectors of the show displaying art activity in Peace Messenger Cities like Milena Babić,Vanesa Cvahte, Mathias Flügge, Fernando Castro Florez, Marko Košan, Jernej Kožar, Želimir Koščević, Pino Poggi, Ron Ramsey invited artists like Peter Hergold, Jože Tisnikar, Sašo Vrabič, Achille Ghidini, Alija Hafizović - Haf, Yukihiro Sumie, Katrin von Maltzahn, Katja Valeska Peschke, Matten Vogel, Concha Garcia, Antonio Murado, Gonzalo Puch, Javier Tudela, Milorad Djokić, Jovan Marinković, Goran Rakić, Milivoje Štulović, Seiichi Furuya, Sarva Sanna, Minna Heikinaho, Alii Maria Savolainen and others.
The ever topical theme indicated the problems of contemporary society, most eloquently with the expressive potential of photography and video, very concretely also with the written reflections and installations, and sufficiently sensitively and sometimes even exotically with several "classical" fine art works.
Exhibition of world famous photographer Inge Morath (1923 Graz - 2002 New York), having very varied photographic work (including jobs with international magazines such as Magnum, Life, Paris Match and Vogue), was showing her journey through the borderland between Auistrian southern Styria and Slovenia searching for clues to her own origins and the interaction of history, daily life and culture in the border area.
The globe-trotter Morath always tried to capture human aspects and everyday life rather than spectacular events, it was also a search for her own roots. This project, curated by Regina Strassegger, Kurt Kaindl and Brigitte Blüml, was also a trip through her own past, to the home of her ancestors and a house in the vineyards that had been a life-long friend.Her mother’s family, Wiesler-Morath, originated from what used to be "Lower Styria", now Slovenia, and the area was full of memories for Morath: "When I was a child and walked for days through the vineyards and hillsides with my grandfather, and we found shells from a period thousands of years ago when this land was an ocean, I felt like I was on a submarine taking a trip around the world."
This exhibition, however, was also an area with historical and political implications: traumatic years during two World Wars, expulsion, fascism, communism and finally the metamorphoses of the present have all marked the area and its inhabitants.
Fifty years after the very first exhibition Swedish kitchen was shown in Slovenj Gradec the exhibition focusing on contemporary art works and positions inspired by the same phenomenon was prepared. Artists: Viktor Bernik, Mirko Bratuša, Dušan Bučar, Gašper Demšar, Maja Demšar Tasič, Marko Deu, Design center Gorenje, Marjan Dovjak, Dejan Habicht, Ana Hušman, Tomo Jeseničnik, Metka Kavčič Takač, Žiga Kariž, Tanja Lažetić, Zmago Lenardič, Gani Llalloshi, Mohammed Müller, Dušan Otašević, Alja Ovsenik,Tadej Pogačar & P.A.R.A.S.I.T.E. Museum, Pino Poggi, Marij Pregelj, Naca Rojnik, Rene Rusjan, Maksim Sedej, Katja Skušek, Nataša Skušek, Mladen Stropnik, Teranga Restaurant, Franco Vecchiet, Sašo Vrabič, Zbirka jedilnega pribora Ferdinanda Leitingerja, Blaž Zupančič.
In 2005, in the year of a number of important thresholds and anniversaries, among others, sixty years since the end of World War II, what meant for organizers as a symbol and the hope that conflicts of such dimensions would never happen again, and the founding of the United Nations, that with the Declaration on Human Rights simbolize the assurement that human rights would become important and would see a real chance of being realised, in Slovenj Gradec was featured international fine art exhibition simply entitled 2 LIVE. It encompassed the widest possible meanings and existential dilemmas of our existence and being. Primary focus was put on the photography - medium that decisively marked the 20th century and has become one of the leading art genre.
The artists of different generations were selected by the group of curators: Boris Gorupič, Andreja Hribernik, Kurt Kaindl, Marko Košan, Želimir Koščević, Jernej Kožar, Tomo Jeseničnik, Maja Škerbot, Sašo Vrabič and Milena Zlatar. They point to the social, ecological, economic and humanitarian dilemmas of man, to picture man as an individual and a social being, whose basic right is to live.
Among 71 artists or artist groups there were exibiting: Hynek Alt and Aleksandra vajd, Brass ART, Erika Bialowons,Barbara Caveng, Božidar Dolenc, Zijah Gafić, Kaspars Goba, Tomaž Gregorič,Dejan Habicht, Arne Hodalič, Jasna Hribernik, Tomo Jeseničnik Manca, Stojan Kerbler, Tanja Lažetić, Zmago Lenardič, Martin Liebscher, Brigitte Maria Mayer, Steve McCurry, Boris Mikheilow, Dragiša Modrinjak, Inge Morath, Borut Peterlin, Anneké Pettican, Veno Pilon, Irina Ruppert, Klavdij Sluban, Hermann Stamm, Jože Suhadolnik, Annelies Štrba, Ingo Taubhorn, Amos Taylor, Eric van Hove, Sašo Vrabič, Huiqin Wang, Veronika Zapletalova, Tobias Zielony, Joco Žnidaršič.
The international exhibition Thread with 33 domestic and foreign artists, curated by Maja Škerbot, marked the 50th Anniversary of the Koroška Gallery of Fine Arts. It put on a pedestal a material that had for centuries remained in the domain of clothing culture and the applied arts and showed how in recent years, it has entered into the world of the visual arts in truly sovereign style and on a surprisingly massive scale. The exhibition Thread were witnessing a peculiar phenomenon in which profane materials like thread are being elevated to illustrate the plural character of the field of contemporary visual art creation, as well as contemporary society, with its vanishing differences between the sexes.
The selected art positions and manifold aesthetical languages were mostly actualising private spaces in their relationship to the public realm; almost as a rule, the artists have not had distanced themselves from dimensions traditionally attributed to and expressed by thread. The connection between clothing culture, applied art, domestic equipment and contemporary art production is intense, and it is the subject of illumination in the exhibition Thread.
“We also wanted the exhibition to be in accord with the times, when artists less frequently turn to classical painting and sculpting materials or contemporary visual means of presentation (film, video, net.art, performance, etc.) but now often incorporate commonplace materials,” said Milena Zlatar on the opening speech and continued “the growing use of thread as a material that not only dictates the métier approach in contemporary art practice but also has much wider connotations (in historical, philosophical, social and other contexts), prompted the idea of organising an exhibition that would be special as a theme in art, as well as eloquent in the sense of the fifty years of ongoing activity of the gallery.”
Artists: Élodie Antoine, Rosalía Banet, Wiebke Bartsch, Barbara Bernsteiner, Tania Candiani, Barbara Caveng, Lada Cerar in Sašo Sedlaček, Andrejka Čufer, Jochen Flinzer, Claus Föttinger, Zuzanna Janin, Metka Kavčič, Justyna Koeke, Michael Kos, Eduard Lesjak, Martin Löffke, Polona Maher, Isa Melsheimer, Janet Morton, Alen Ožbolt, Sandrine Pelletier, Marija Mojca Pungerčar, Iris Schieferstein, Chiharu Shiota, Kei Takemura, André Tempel, Anu Tuominen, Julia van Koolwijk, Marjolijn van der Meij, Petra Varl, Patricia Waller and Silke Wawro.
The four-weeks lasting Necessary discourse on Hysteria, crated by Jernej Kožar and Rado Poggi, revived museums and faced up to the responsibility of aesthetical education. Artists of two generations visualised, intervened and interacted together with theoreticians on the issue of social hysteria. They experienced in the first week the process of an exhibition-installation, and in the remaining weeks joined performances, discussions, theatre, talks, speeches and video works.
Terror, Genetic Engineering, Consumer Society/Isolation, Mass-Information, Power of Media, Profiling, Supershows, Identity, Privacy, Noise Consumption, Sweet-life and Ideology are topics being treated and interpreted by FLATZ, Polona Tratnik, Mukul Deora, Viktor Bernik, Pinopoggi, Metka Zupanič, Vesna Bukovec, Tadej Pogačar, Tanja Vujinović, Jaša, Jože Barši, Timm Ulrichs & Ursula Neugebauer. Esseys were participated by Simon Bryceson, Caroline Kihato, Peter N. Kirstein, Marko Košan, Gorazd Mrevlje, Ursula Sladek and Špela Spanžel.
Gallery´s collection is using a museal accession to the collecting, preservation and conservation of modern and contemporary Slovene fine arts production. Focused especially on the regional authors, but also refined with several donations, bequests and purchases of international ones, the gallery is since its establishing building up a kind of museum of social aesthetics. In the moment the collection is in the process of archiving art works digitaly to create the accessibility of all works of the collection worldwide in every moment. There are several segments of the collection with more than 1000 art works:
Painter Jože Tisnikar (1928-1998), who matured as an artist while suffering traumatic experiences in a hospital pathology department and whose work is best defined by the term 'dark modernism'; 43 paintings and drawings present the artist's development from the early years to maturity and, together with documentary material on the artist's life, reveal Tisnikar's world from different angles, examining his iconographic theme of death and highlighting his particular nature.
It consists of paintings, prints, photographs, original architectural drawings, statues, and documentary material on installations, including performances and other audio-visual forms of contemporary presentation. A range of internationally-famous artists is represented, including Ossip Zadkine, Victor Vasarely, Maria Bonomi, Toon Wegner, Gene Chu and Paolo Minoli.
The gallery's collection of works by Slovene artists reflects several decades of the gallery's exhibitions programme, and features the work of Marko Šušteršič, France Mihelič, Riko Debenjak, Marjan Pogačnik, Božidar Jakac, Ive Šubic, Rudolf Kotnik, Kiar Meško, Dragica Čadež, Janez Boljka, Zdenko Huzjan and others. The most significant segment of the collection are works by artists who are natives of Carinthia or are in some way or another connected with the Mislinja, Drava or Mežica Valleys, namely Franjo Golob, Karel Pečko, Bogdan Borčić, Lojze Logar, Gustav Gnamuš, Rade Nikolić, Anton Dolenc, Vida Slivniker, Harald Draušbaher, Andrej Grošelj, Štefan Marflak, Miran Prodnik, Naca Rojnik, Peter Hergold and Sašo Vrabič.
The collection also presents the heritage from the 19th century onwards as well as the most recent art trends. A special place is occupied by the works of Franc Berneker (1874-1932), the first modern Slovene sculptor and fellow traveller of the impressionist painters, and by the works by painter Oskar Pistor (1865-1928), whose portraits, genre and landscape paintings establish links between the Upper Drava Valley and cosmopolitan Vienna and Munich, and also depict the landscapes of the Tyrol and Carinthia which inspired Pistor. The collection included also some works of former Yugoslav authors like: Krsto Hegedušić, Vlado Jakelić, Pedja Milosavljević, Miljenko Bosanac, Zorislav Drempetić, Nikola Koydl, Robert Tanay, Seid Hasanefendić, Zvonko Lončarić, Branislav Dinić, Nikola Gvozdenović, Mića Popović, and others.
Works by Italian artist Pino Poggi (donated in 1998) provide the basis for a developing International Museum of Social Aesthetics.
Dr. Franc Tretjak spent nearly 20 years in Africa as an economic consultant of the United Nations and donated to Slovenj Gradec his African collection consisting of domestic artefacts (vessels, ladles, calebashes, fans, baskets, musical instruments, tools, arms, etc) and items which have an ethnological value (cult objects including masks and statuettes, fetishes and amulets, objects of white and black magic, Nomoli (Nomori) statues and rare 'antiques' from the African continent).
The open-air gallery on the edge of Štibuh Park is also arranged as a venue for cultural events. In the 1970s its cultural function was further enhanced with the installation of sculptures by selected artists (Ivan Meštrović, Drago Tršar, Josip Diminić, Jordan Grabuloski, Ivan Sabolić, Ratko Vulanović, Ana Bešlić, etc) under the slogan 'For Peace'.
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