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What remains. DEATH ] [ PROOF. The entire sky has been reworked.

Datum
Time
Event Label
Opening
Organisational Units
xhibit
Location Venue (1)
Main Building
Location Address (1)
Schillerplatz 3
Location ZIP and/or City (1)
1010 Vienna
Location Room (1)
xhibit

Opening hours: Tue–Sun 10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. / free admission
Special opening times: October 26, 2014 (national holiday) and November 1, 2014 (All Saints’ Day) 10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.

Two projects on the central topic of refurbishment: DEATH ] [ PROOF by Christian Fröhlich with Christopher Ghouse and THE ENTIRE SKY HAS BEEN REWORKED by Sigrid Eyb-Green and Gerda Kaltenbruner with Martin Beck, Anna Weiß, and students of the Institute for Education in the Arts: Lisa Begeré, Lillian Bocksch, Andreas Buchner, Eva-Maria Eisner, Antonia Fätkenheuer, Veronika Gaitzenauer, Katharina Köck, Christiana Lugbauer, Leo Mayr, Pia Nagl, Lea Ruppert, Katharina Schwaller, Tomislav Stjepanovic, Sieglinde Stockner, Lisa Stumbauer, Lena Taubald, Alexander Trausner, and Marvin Ziegler.

Opening: Tuesday, October 7, 2014, 7:00 p.m.
Welcome address: Eva Blimlinger, Rector of the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna
Introduction DEATH ] [ PROOF: Christian Fröhlich, video artist
Introduction THE ENTIRE SKY HAS BEEN REWORKED: Gerda Kaltenbruner, Institute for Conservation and Restoration, and Martin Beck, Institute for Education in the Arts

WHAT REMAINS

Two different lines of sight intersect in the exhibition WHAT REMAINS: while documenting how use and aging processes inscribe themselves into a building on the one hand, the show also shifts the focus from the restored object to the conservation process as such. WHAT REMAINS maps an uncertain terrain and secures traces in the pivot of what is going on.

DEATH ] [ PROOF

Refurbishment. Conversion. Destroy. Renovate to death.
During your visit of this exhibition the entire building of the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna finds itself in a kind of limbo before its pending refurbishment. Though preservation is a primary objective, there is always the risk of destroying or renovating something to death. The idiom "death-proof" describes the technical design of a machine protecting its users from losing their lives. Concerning architecture, the question that arises is how to refurbish a building without renovating it to death in terms of the culture of building becoming manifest in it? The experts' answer is not an unequivocal one. The range of suggested solutions spans from restoring the patinated original state by "exposure" to simulating the past by applying new layers.


   Academy of Fine Arts Vienna
   
   S 05a, art room "Aktsaal" / IBK
   
   Photo: Christian Fröhlich
Academy of Fine Arts Vienna
S 05a, art room "Aktsaal" / IBK
Photo: Christian Fröhlich

   Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, E A3, studio / IBK
   
   Performative Art
   
   Photo: Christian Fröhlich
Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, E A3, studio / IBK
Performative Art
Photo: Christian Fröhlich

The project DEATH ] [ PROOF serves as a corrective and snapshot of the actual state here. The video portraits of the rooms of the Academy on Schillerplatz offer the unique opportunity to pause and observe how the house presents itself before its renovation starts. Camera and video medium help us to have a closer look. Details, surfaces, materials, ruinous parts, patina … valuable and cherished things, the feasible and the strange, which the human eye usually just glides across, are made visible by the camera eye in capturing them. One thing is already clear, without wanting to make a judgment: Hansen's building will never be seen again as it is presented in the exhibition DEATH ] [ PROOF.


   Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, S 15a, lecture hall
   
   "Anatomiesaal"
   
   Photo: Christian Fröhlich
Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, S 15a, lecture hall
"Anatomiesaal"
Photo: Christian Fröhlich

   Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, DG 13,
   
   corridor / access to attic
   
   Photo: Christian Fröhlich
Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, DG 13,
corridor / access to attic
Photo: Christian Fröhlich

Note: All video portraits of the more than one hundred rooms of the Academy were recorded with one and the same focal length (30 mm), exposure time (1/60 sec.), and light sensitivity (ISO 400) in high-resolution images (4 K@25 fps) and have identical lengths (3 min).

THE ENTIRE SKY HAS BEEN REWORKED

The preservation of artworks and cultural property is primarily concerned with "the object" to be conserved. These objects are measured and documented, studied, mapped, and investigated in manifold ways before measures are taken. At the end of the process, the work leaves the scene as a "conserved / restored object."

The entire sky has been reworked deals with the consequences ensuing from moving ["the object"], the artwork, which all these activities are aimed at, out of focus. Do we enter a zone characterized by lack of concentration, as the term "out of focus" suggests, or may we even experience a stimulating state of blurriness, of uncertainty? What remains when the protagonist leaves the stage? Does shifting the action from the focus to secondary arenas give rise to new narratives?


   Removing the overpainting from a mural, detail.
   
   Photo: Pia Nagl
Removing the overpainting from a mural, detail.
Photo: Pia Nagl

   Cotton swabs. Photo: Sigrid Eyb-Green
Cotton swabs. Photo: Sigrid Eyb-Green

Intermediate, secondary and by-products are detached from their work contexts and appreciated as artefacts. Moments of the working process are highlighted; seemingly random traces are scanned; things rejected are brought to mind; what has been abandoned or tried out, regarded as fragmentary, inconclusive, or a failure constructively interferes with the coherence and conclusiveness of traditional documentations. The hesitations and coincidences, imponderabilities and surprises, as well as the restrictions and trivialities of the conservation process unfold a language of their own. That this implies disturbances, brings about puzzles, and provokes misunderstandings is absolutely intended.

The entire sky has been reworked has been developed and realized in collaboration with the Institute for Education in the Arts. Students from the Design and Context Department have conceived a presentation system that allows to grasp the exhibits in their complex function and aesthetic and invites an unprejudiced view. This dialogue offers an approach for examining the concepts the exhibition is based on in regard to their communication potential, for fine-tuning thematic contexts, and establishing new connections.


   Three hares made of PUR foam.
   
   Photo: Sigrid Eyb-Green
Three hares made of PUR foam.
Photo: Sigrid Eyb-Green

   Support construction for a papier-mâché object.
   
   Photo: Sigrid Eyb-Green
Support construction for a papier-mâché object.
Photo: Sigrid Eyb-Green

WHAT REMAINS. PROGRAM

Thur, October 16, 2014, 4:00 p.m., xhibit
DEATH ] [ PROOF. VIDEOGRAPHY AS AN ARCHITECTURAL INSTRUMENT

Fri, October 24, 2014, 4:00 p.m., xhibit
THE ENTIRE SKY HAS BEEN REWORKED: A TALK ABOUT WORKING PROCESSES IN CONSERVATION

PUBLICATION

Der gesamte Himmel ist überarbeitet (The entire sky has been reworked) by Sigrid Eyb-Green and Gerda Kaltenbruner, 196 pages, 107 color ill., Verlag Letter P, ISBN 978-3-9503168-9-6, 26 euros

SPECIAL THANKS GO TO

Judith Auer, Martin Auer, Josef Györgi, Johanna Digruber, Helmut Hempel, Michael Herbst, Jochen Käferhaus, Claudia Koch, Josef Kristaly, Robert Pelzer, Philip Schmoetten, Axel Sprenger, Karin Trojer, Rudolf Weisgrab, and Julia Wikarski, as well as the teaching staff and the students of the Institute for Conservation and Restoration and the Institute of Art and Architecture.

*Current findings prove that "today's interpretation of the red parapet areas in the academy's corridor zones is wrong. Obviously, there must have been a continuous black base here, too . . . As an extensive uncovering of the original appearance is out of the question, the only solution would be to overpaint the base once more." (from the Riff OEG's inquiry report of 2008)