Kites and f*ckups at Kunstverein Kärnten / Klagenfurt

Kites and f*ckups

curated by Stafett (Minda Andren, Jennifer Gelardo, Flavio Palasciano, Alexander Jackson Wyatt)


with: Brishty Alam, Yoko Andrén, Elioz J Carranza, Olga Cerkasova, Maximilian Engel, Richard Eß, Philipp Ozkar Friedrich, Parastu Gharabaghi, Tobias Hansen, Jack Heard, Rebekka Hilmer Heltoft,  Anastasia Jermolaewa, Ma Jia, Anja Kohlweiss, Sarah Księska, Hannahlisa Kunyik, Raúl i Lima, Evelina Lindström, Jelena Micić, Rebecca Mielonen, Laurids Oder, Aline Olmos, Andrew Read, Fabio Santacroce, Ania Shestakova, Jumpei Shimada, Simon Speiser, Alison Veit, Robin R. Waart


1 May – 9 June 2022


Kunstverein Kärnten

Künstlerhaus Klagenfurt

Goethepark 1

9020 Klagenfurt


In the context of the Kunstverein Kärnten the invited artists looked at the structural form 

of the exhibition space in Klagenfurt and began to view the building developed by Franz Baumgartner in 1913 in comparison with the aesthetic principles of other art associations 

in the European region. Above all, the formal-aesthetic similarity of the roof construction of these buildings stood out: the windowed gable roofs of the early industrial building resemble flying objects in the structure of their appearance, which we commonly refer to as kites. The reason for the preoccupation with kite flying within the narrative of this exhibition thus arises from the interpretation of this architectural feature. In the conception of the exhibition, the structure of the flying kite served as a metaphor for staging the fragility of (artists’) positions in the context of an exhibition; and this is not least because it is a function of an art association to support artists in their careers, so to speak, with a little upwind.

Stafett is an unstable situation, similar to a contagion – more than a collective, it rather behaves like a sports team. Inevitable influences and potential imitation within the closely interacting group are desired. Stafett’s modality is based on the fluidity of authorship and assimilation, considering the common means of expression, the art exhibition, as speculative as well as transformative and organic. Each collaborative act of Stafett is preceded by the impulse to play with the format of exhibition installation. Through this Stafett shakes up the usual structure of differentiation in an artwork’s representation.

Stafett consists of Minda Andrén, Jennifer Gelardo, Flavio Palasciano, and Alexander Jackson Wyatt. In a dialogue between the artists’ respective approaches, the exhibition functions as an aggregate for the transmission of ideas and works, in which the grip; and the offer of handing over and accepting an object – has been developed as their fundamental scheme. Stafett focuses on exploring the boundaries and possibilities that exist in the dichotomies of public and private or individual and collective.       

 

Notable exhibitions include SCAMMING (Palazzo Lancia, Turin 2017), Glass Jaws (GOMO, Vienna 2018), The Captivity, The Flattening (KNULP, Sydney 2019) and STAFETT (Georg Kargl Permanent, Vienna 2019).

        Minda Andrén

1990, Sweden. Lives and works in Vienna.

Andrén transforms the original images into playful, complex compositions that shift their original connotations to ask questions about what happens when image flow, meaning, and interpretation intersect, playing with the temporality of digital media and the supposed static nature of painting.

 

        Jennifer Gelardo

1985, US-America. Lives and works in Vienna and Frankfurt.

Gelardo’s concern is to explore the spectrum of historical and cultural notions of exclusion in group dynamics, through which she creates video and photo documentation for the observation of group structures, which are activated with performative sculptures to explore psycho-social conditions of (exhibition) situations.

 

        Flavio Palasciano

1987, Lausanne Switzerland. Lives and works in Vienna.

Palasciano writes scripts in the form of sculptures, installations, photographs, and drawings that explore the nature of contemporary myths, cultural identity constructs and economies of authenticity as market value for their legitimation.

        Alexander Jackson Wyatt

1989, Sydney Australia. Lives and works in Vienna.

Wyatt’s spatial and interdisciplinary work, often resulting in sculptures and installations, combines painting, text, photography, sound, and video. Through this, he intertwines fictional and anecdotal narratives alongside modes of abstraction as materials, history and objects are formed.