History Will Repeat Itself. Strategies of re-enactment in contemporary (media) art and performance
HMKV at PHOENIX Halle Dortmund: June 9 - September 23, 2007
In contemporary (media) art there has been an almost ‘uncanny’ longing
for the performative repetition or re-creation of historical situations
and events. The exhibition
History Will Repeat Itself
focuses on current strategies of re-enactment in contemporary (media)
art and performance, and presents the positions and strategies of 30
international artists. It is a cooperation between Hartware
MedienKunstVerein in Dortmund, and KW Institute for Contemporary Art
Berlin, and is the first comprehensive exhibition in Germany dealing
with the topic, or strategy, of re-enactment.
In general, a so-called re-enactment is a historically correct
recreation of socially relevant events, such as important battles or
other historical events. In a re-enactment, the audience that normally
remain passive or at a certain distance of the documented event become
immediate witnesses of a (repeated historical) event, which unfolds in
front of their eyes, or they become participants in an action, in which
they actively participate.
In contemporary art there has been
an increasing number of artistic re-enactments – the performative
repetition or re-creation of historical situations and events. For
example, in his work "The Battle of Orgreave" (2001) the British artist
Jeremy Deller had a violent clash between miners and police from the
year 1984 re-enacted by ex-miners, ex-police and other re-enactors.
Unlike popular historical re-enactments, like e.g. the re-enactment of
historical battles, artistic re-enactments are not performative
re-stagings of historic situations and events that occurred a long time
ago; rather, events (often traumatic ones) are re-enacted that are
viewed as very important for the present. Artistic re-enactments are
not simply affirming what has happened in the past, but rather they are
questioning the present via repeating or re-enacting historical events
that have left their traces in the collective memory. Re-enactments are
artistic interrogations of media images that try to scrutinise the
reality of the images, while at the same time pointing towards the fact
that collective memory is essentially mediated memory.
In
Dortmund, the exhibition will take place from June 9 - September 23,
2007 - in parallel to Documenta 12 (Kassel) and skulptur.projekte
muenster - in the spectacular, 2.200 qm large PHOENIX Halle Dortmund
which HMKV uses as an exhibition space since the end of 2003. PHOENIX
Halle, built in 1895, is standing on the area of the former
Phoenix-West steelworks in Dortmund-Hörde.
The exhibition will then travel to Berlin and be on display at Kunst-Werke from 18 November 2007 until 13 January 2008.
Concept: Inke Arns
Curated by: Inke Arns und Gabriele Horn
Co-Curator: Katharina Fichtner
Opening: Friday, 8 June 2007, 19:00, at PHOENIX Halle Dortmund
Introduction: Dr. Inke Arns, curator and artistic director of HMKV Dortmund.
-- After the opening, HMKV will serve you the finest music and drinks --
On Saturday, 9 June 2007 at 16:00 there will be talks (in English) by
-- Alina Hoyne (Melbourne), art theoretician who has just completed her dissertation on the topic of re-enactment
-- Rod Dickinson (London), artist who is participating with two installations in the exhibition „History Will Repeat Itself“.
Invitation card (PDF):
http://www.hmkv.de/dyn/_data/HWR_Einladung.pdf
Exhibition Hartware MedienKunstVerein Artistic Director: Dr. Inke Arns
Managing Director: Susanne Ackers
Technical Director and Director of Installation and Exhibition Design: Uwe Gorski
Junior Curator: Francis Hunger
Project Management: Darija Šimunović
Organisation, Coordination: Francis Hunger, Darija Šimunović
Public Relations: Roland Kentrup
Intern: Frauke Hoffschulte
Installation Team: Jens Eberhardt, Željko Petonjic, Kay Kasprzik
Installation Team Management: Uwe Gorski
InfoTrainers: Etta Gerdes, Gabriela Grund-Bert, Linda Herrmann, Kay Kasprzik, Christoph Kesselmeier,
Alissa Krusch, Hendrik Müller, Maria Schulte
Coordination InfoTrainers: Božica Babić
ChefInnen vom Dienst: Božica Babić, Katrin Hauser, Tabea Sieben
Catalogue
On the occasion of the exhibition a comprehensive catalogue will be
published in early June 2007 by Revolver - Archiv für aktuelle Kunst:
History will repeat itself. Strategies of Re-enactment in contemporary (media) art and performance,
ed. by Inke Arns and Gaby Horn for Hartware MedienKunstVerein and KW
Institute for Contemporary Art, Revolver - Archiv für aktuelle Kunst,
Frankfurt am Main 2007, 16,8 x 23,4 cm, Hardcover, many color ill., 191
pages, dt./engl., ISBN 978-3-86588-402-2
The exhibition History Will Repeat Itself is funded by Kulturstiftung des Bundes / German Federal Cultural Foundation
Kunststiftung NRW
Der Ministerpräsident des Landes Nordrhein-Westfalen
Kulturbüro Stadt Dortmund
PHOENIX
dortmund-project
Bundesamt für Kultur BAK (Schweiz)
NRW Kultursekretariat Wuppertal
The Henry Moore Foundation
Pro Helvetia
AFAA / Französische Botschaft
The British Council
Medion
Heinz (media partner)
We would like to thank the Bundesamt für Kultur BAK (Switzerland) for
supporting the production and the presentation of the work by Frédéric
Moser and Philippe Schwinger.
The program of Hartware
MedienKunstVerein at PHOENIX Halle Dortmund is supported by Kulturbuero
and by Wirtschaftsfoerderung der Stadt Dortmund.
The cultural
programs of KW Institute for Contemporary Art are made possible thanks
to the support of The Governing Mayor of Berlin - Senate Chancellery -
Cultural Affairs.
For press material, please contact Roland Kentrup,
kentrup@zk.nrw-online.de Venue and opening hours: HMKV at PHOENIX Halle Dortmund (exhibition venue)
Thursday and Friday 11 - 22
Saturday and Sunday 11 - 20
Hochofenstrasse / corner Rombergstrasse_
Dortmund-Hoerde
How to get there / Map: http://www.hmkv.de/dyn/e_contact_roaddescription/ Hartware MedienKunstVerein (HMKV), Dortmund
Located in the former heavily industrialized region of the Ruhr valley,
Hartware MedienKunstVerein (HMKV) Dortmund is one of the leading
institutions for media art in today's Germany. Founded in 1996, HMKV
serves as a platform for the production, presentation, education on and
contextualisation of contemporary and experimental media art. Since
2003 HMKV’s exhibitions take place in the 2.200 square meter large
PHOENIX Halle (formerly - until 1998 - the site of the steel production
plant Phoenix-West).
www.hmkv.de KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin
KW Institute for Contemporary Art Berlin is regularly listed among
Germany's foremost modern art institutions and attracts international
media coverage. KW has no collection of its own but instead views
itself as a laboratory for communicating and advancing contemporary
cultural developments in Germany and abroad by means of exhibitions,
workshops and resident artists' studios, as well as by collaborating
with artists or other institutions and by commissioning works.
www.kw-berlin.de ... back