#viennacontemporary Magazine

Menu

Skip to content
  • #contemporaryvienna
  • Collecting
  • Discovery
    • CEE
  • Video
  • Archive
    • 2019
    • 2018
    • 2017
    • vc2016
    • 2015
    • 2014
    • 2013

Tag Archives: magazine

“What if museums and galleries wouldn’t exist anymore? How many artists and curators will continue to work with art?” – Luca Lo Pinto
People

“What if museums and galleries wouldn’t exist anymore? How many artists and curators will continue to work with art?” – Luca Lo Pinto

Posted on 18. June 2014 by #viennacontemporary • 1 Comment

Italian curator and founder of “NERO” Luca Lo Pinto recently joined the curatorial team of Kunsthalle Wien. Find out more about him from an interview in which Luca talks about his projects and shares his interests. Continue reading →

“What if museums and galleries wouldn’t exist anymore? How many artists and curators will continue to work with art?” – Luca Lo Pinto
People

“What if museums and galleries wouldn’t exist anymore? How many artists and curators will continue to work with art?” – Luca Lo Pinto

Posted on 18. June 2014 by Kris Kulakova • Leave a comment

Italian curator and founder of “NERO” Luca Lo Pinto recently joined the curatorial team of Kunsthalle Wien. Find out more about him from an interview in which Luca talks about his projects and shares his interests. Continue reading →

Post navigation

SAVE THE DATE
8 – 11 September 2022
viennacontemporary | International Art Fair

contact

Siebensterngasse 46/1/44
A-1070 Vienna, Austria
blog (at) viennacontemporary.at

#viennacontemporary Magazine reports on the activities of viennacontemporary and provides you with in-depth insights into what’s going on in the art world. We publish interviews with gallerists, collectors, artists, and art lovers. Our main focus is Austria, but we also explore the art scene in Southern and Eastern Europe and beyond. viennacontemporary is not only a reflection of the contemporary art landscape in the region. It’s about people, society, trends, and dialogue.

Enter your email address to follow this Magazine and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Top Posts

Collector Reinhard Walenta | illy Art Collection
PRESENTING: TJAŠA POGAČAR | CURATOR OF ZONE1 AT VIENNACONTEMPORARY 2022
Berlin Gallery Weekend | Highlights
Judit Reszegi | Art collector interview
Vienna Weekly: May 9 – 16
Who Is Who
Adrian Riklin and Antonis Stachel | art collectors
Manifesta 10. Part II: The Winter Palace and New Hermitage

follow us on Instagram

Franz West challenged traditional concepts of sculpture and eradicated the taboo of touching art. By putting his artworks on the ground in public spaces, West demolished hierarchy in the relationship between the viewer and the artwork. Art was no longer passive and unresponsive to the viewer, one now had to address the work and think how to engage with it. Consequently, West earned the title of the ‘gentle anarchist.’
The art of Amelie von Wulffen is a wild combination of dream and joke, in which the unconscious and the suppressed, the subjective and the objective, the political and the artistic, balance each other and reflects the artist’s own involvement. “Brown” undertones, family, and genre scenes in a pseudo-romantic, rural idyll meet set pieces from art history. Ice cream flavors such as Magnum, Cornetto & Co frame the scene, timeless triggers for childlike substitute satisfaction.
The hybrid character of the works created by Adrian Kiss in recent years has evolved from the synthesis of the sensuality of his artistic approach and the rationality of his creative process conceived of as design. Kiss’s unique narrative installations created in recent years are deconstructed and constructed, their thematic unity provided by the formulation of the human body in abstract forms, their medial basic tone by the extensive use of materials, and their visual character by the appropriation of details and industrial design forms borrowed from the world of everyday objects and fashion.
Our international team is growing! 📈viennacontemporary receives active support in operational management through several new additions with extensive international experience, such as Business Development Consultant Yana Barinova (Ukraine), External Relations Manager Fruzsina Kacskó (Hungary) and VIP Representative Leonie Mir (Germany). Read more about our new team members in stories 👀

Images:
This year’s opening of the Venice Biennale was as wet as inspiring 🌊 Fruzsina Kacskó, Head of External Relations at viennacontemporary, is sharing her experience and top picks of national pavilions with focus on Eastern Pavilions.
In the art of Zsófia Keresztes, the complex and plastic system of iconographic shapes melting into each other, is paired with the formal language and references of the Millennials. Her works can be interpreted as embodied mosaics that uniquely combine sensuality and virtuality, analogue and digital, real and surreal: creating an archaic, yet extraordinarily contemporary visual language, they revolve around the issues of subjective self-identity. 
Blog at WordPress.com.
  • Follow Following
    • #viennacontemporary Magazine
    • Join 286 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • #viennacontemporary Magazine
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar