UMJ Newsletter Aussendung.

The current exhibitions „Animal Spirits“ at Kunsthaus Graz shows an installation that grows and interlocks digital as well as analogue levels

20.09.2022

 

What is a garden, a habitat, a sphere, a cave? Which spirits live there and how do they show themselves? In a direct dialogue with the Kunsthaus Graz, renowned German artist and essayistic documentary filmmaker Hito Steyerl is creating an installation in the dark dome of Space01 that grows and interlocks on digital as well as analogue levels.

 

Installation view of Hito Steyerl. "Animal Spirits" at the Kunsthaus Graz, Photo: Kunsthaus Graz/J.J. Kucek

„Animal Spirits is a term British economist John Maynard Keynes coined in 1936 to describe the influence of human emotions on markets. Fear and greed interact to create a sphere of irrationality. The pseudo-naturalist idea of the ,survival of the fittest‘ controls human ideas of society and exchange.“ (Steyerl)

 

What will grow in glass spheres and on shiny screens under the large bubble of the Kunsthaus requires care in both digital and physical space. Within Steyerl’s living setting, structures that have long been closely intertwined in everyday life become an astonishing accumulation of a larger whole, nourishing and consuming each other.
In a maelstrom of pulsating images, digital rhythms, and sounds, Steyerl has the audience speculate on the relations between language and aesthetic form, between technological structures, biological life, and power-preserving systems.

 

Hito Steyerl’s works are factual, informed and aesthetically polished, sometimes humorous and (therefore) irritating analyses of our high-tech society. As a profound expert on digital space, against the backdrop of the climate crisis, the pandemic, the digital revolution, neoliberalism and the associated shift in the meanings of work, power, control and distribution she develops multiple, partially interactive narratives that identify the image as a site where the world is perceived. The artist thereby follows “reality expanded by technology,” engaging both critically and subversively with ecological systems and their ties to global flows of capital and goods, to migration and the question of participation in existing power structures.
Playing with the manipulative power of the visual, she thereby deals out institutional critique that extends far beyond the museum.

Hito Steyerl fills the Kunsthaus Graz with "Animal Spirits", Photo: Kunsthaus Graz/J.J. Kucek

Hito Steyerl was born in Munich in 1966, and lives and works in Berlin. Steyerl is one of the most important media artists and profound analysts of a digital, image-driven world. She studied documentary film directing at the Japan Institute of Moving Image and later at the University of Film and Television in Munich. She went on to study philosophy at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna, where she completed her doctorate. She is Professor of Experimental Film and Video at the Berlin University of the Arts and co-founded the Research Center for Proxy Politics there. For the past 20 years, her work has been exhibited in art contexts and widely received internationally.

In addition to her work as a film artist, Steyerl is also an author and performer. Together with Mark Waschke, she staged the play Ich spiele, also bin ich! Ein digitaler Bauernkrieg. A selection of her essays is collected in four books: Die Farbe der Wahrheit (2008), The Wretched of the Screen (2012), Beyond Representation / Jenseits der Repräsentation (2016), Duty Free Art – Art in the Age of Planetary Civil Wars / Kunst im Zeitalter des globalen Bürgerkriegs (2017/2018).

 

 

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Hito Steyerl
Animal Spirits

Kunsthaus Graz, Lendkai 1, 8020 Graz

Opening: 21.09.2022, 8 pm

Duration: 22.09.2022‒08.01.2023

www.kunsthausgraz.at 

 

The exhibition is shown in the framework of steirischer herbst ’22

 

Please find more information and photos here: Hito Steyerl

 

 

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 We are looking forward to your coverage!

 

 

Kind regards

 

 

 

Daniela Teuschler
+43/664/8017-9214, daniela.teuschler@museum-joanneum.at

Stephanie Liebmann
+43/664/8017-9213, stephanie.liebmann@museum-joanneum.at

Alexandra Reischl
+43/699/1780-9002, alexandra.reischl@museum-joanneum.at