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How To Live Together

25.5.–15.10.2017
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Jorit Aust

Location

Kunsthalle Wien
Museumsquartier

How To Live Together explores the conditions and prospects of living together in terms of individual and social dimensions. Key factors of this survey exhibition not only include dynamics and shifts at the political and economic level, but also changing social relations. The works of more than thirty international artists from different generations are based on personal experience and, at the same time, point to changing relations between the private and the political, between stagnant and accelerating contemporary circumstances, reality and utopian ideals. The diverse models of living together presented, reveal how society is more than just the sum of its individuals.

From August Sander’s portraits of society to Tina Barney’s depictions of social elites to Cana Bilir-Meier’s cinematic exploration of the forgotten stories of migrant workers, How To Live Together shows that the stranger, the other, is something people are made into. Universal human feelings including love, fear, faith, and longing for peace, are addressed by Goshka Macuga’s android, which launches an appeal to humanity while simultaneously calling for traditional role models to be overcome. Inspired by the debate on Brexit, Wolfgang Tillmans’ campaign marks a counter-movement: involvement in civil society – based on solidarity and on what interconnects us – gains heightened importance.

Artists: Bas Jan Ader, Kader Attia, Sven Augustijnen, Tina Barney, Cana Bilir-Meier, Ayzit Bostan, Mohamed Bourouissa, Kasper De Vos, Ieva Epnere, Aslan Gaisumov, Gelitin, Liam Gillick, Paul Graham, Johan Grimonprez, Binelde Hyrcan, Leon Kahane, Herlinde Koelbl, Armin Linke, Goshka Macuga, Taus Makhacheva, Pedro Moraes, Sarah Morris, Adam Pendleton, Yvonne Rainer, Jeroen de Rijke / Willem de Rooij, Willem de Rooij, August Sander, Ritu Sarin / Tenzing Sonam, Augustas Serapinas, Jeremy Shaw, Wolfgang Tillmans, Rosemarie Trockel

Exhibition architecture: Studio Miessen

Curator: Nicolaus Schafhausen Curatorial assistant: Juliane Bischoff

The Community College offers an expansive program and serves as a meeting point. Questions raised within the exhibition How To Live Together are put under discussion, brought forward in collective study sessions and tested out practically in workshops. The program aims to critically explore structures of learning and education, as well as the role that feelings play for groups, political movements and familial models of living together.

The idea and the program of Community College were developed within the framework of Denkfabrik – a young circle of friends of Kunsthalle Wien – and continue to evolve as an open and ongoing process. Join us!

The Community College Card is valid until 15 October 2017 and allows you to attend all Community College events and to visit the exhibition How To Live Together throughout the whole duration. Available at the Kunsthalle Wien Shop. (EUR 16 / EUR 8 reduced)

Stay up-to-date and receive the entire program with the Kunsthalle Wien Whats App Service: +43 676 378 65 12

Each Sunday you decide on the admission fee and pay as much as you want for your exhibition visit. Press clippings"Part 2: The Good News"-We Make Money Not Art, 8.8.2017"Part 1: The Bad News"-We Make Money Not Art, 3.8.2017"Videos, Sculptures and Photographs Explore the Complexities of Community in a Changing World"-Humble Arts Foundation, 6.7.2017"Harmonic Discord"-Artforum, 30.5.2017

Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Jorit Aust
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Stephan Wyckoff: Paul Graham, Beyond Caring, 1984/85, © Paul Graham, Courtesy Anthony Reynolds Gallery, London; Goshka Macuga, To the Son of Man Who Ate the Scroll, 2016, Courtesy Fondazione Prada, Mailand
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Stephan Wyckoff: Mohamed Bourouissa, L’Utopie d’August Sander, 2012–2013, Courtesy der Künstler und kamel mennour, Paris/London; Herlinde Koelbl, Angela Merkel, 1991–2006, aus dem Zyklus: Spuren der Macht © Herlinde Koelbl, Courtesy der Künstler
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Stephan Wyckoff: Goshka Macuga, To the Son of Man Who Ate the Scroll, 2016, Courtesy Fondazione Prada, Mailand
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Stephan Wyckoff: Goshka Macuga, To the Son of Man Who Ate the Scroll, 2016, Courtesy Fondazione Prada, Mailand; Herlinde Koelbl, Angela Merkel, 1991–2006, aus dem Zyklus: Spuren der Macht © Herlinde Koelbl, Courtesy die Künstlerin; Aslan Gaisumov, People of No Consequence, 2016, Courtesy der Künstler
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Stephan Wyckoff: Mohamed Bourouissa, Périphérique, 2005–08, Courtesy der Künstler und kamel mennour, Paris/London
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Jorit Aust: Tina Barney, Installationsansicht, Courtesy die Künstlerin und Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Jorit Aust: Willem de Rooij, Bouquet V, 2010, Courtesy der Künstler und Sammlung Haubrok, Berlin
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Jorit Aust: Kasper De Vos, Native Kitch and Spiritual Ravers, 2016, Courtesy der Künstler
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Jorit Aust
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Jorit Aust: Ieva Epnere, Riga Circus, 2004–08/2017, Courtesy die Künstlerin
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Jorit Aust: Aslan Gaisumov, People of No Consequence, 2016, Courtesy der Künstler
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Jorit Aust: Jeremy Shaw, Quickeners, 2014, Courtesy der Künstler und KÖNIG GALERIE, Berlin
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Jorit Aust: Wolfgang Tillmans, Anti-Brexit Campaign, 2016, Courtesy der Künstler und Between Bridges, Berlin
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Jorit Aust: Leon Kahane, it’s an uphill battle, 2017, Courtesy der Künstler
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Jorit Aust: Sven Augustijnen, Installation, Courtesy der Künstler, La Loge, Brüssel und Jan Mot Gallery, Brüssel
Installationsansicht: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Jorit Aust: Cana Bilir-Meier, Semra Ertan, 2013, Courtesy die Künstlerin
Installationsansicht: Augustas Serapinas, Sigi, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Foto: Jorit Aust
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