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Museum of Contemporary Art
Karl-Tauchnitz-Straße 9-11
D-04107 Leipzig

Office +49 341-140 81 0
Front Desk +49 341-140 81 26
Fax +49 341-140 81 11
Email office@gfzk.de

Opening Hours
Tue-Fri 2pm - 7pm
Sat-Sun 12pm - 6pm
Both museums are barrier-free.

Entrance Fees
GfZK-1, GfZK-2: 5€/3€
GfZK-1 + GfZK-2: 8€/4€

Nichtorte, Orte. Collection Exhibition 2009

07.02.2009 - 10.01.2010

Curated by Conny Dietrich, Heidi Stecker

Artists: Azra Aksamija, Sibylle Bergemann, Joachim Brohm, Jan Brokof, Zdenko Buzek, Nathan Coley, Till Exit, Arno Fischer, Günther Förg, Eberhard Havekost, Werner Heldt, Margret Hoppe, Ilya Kabakov, Johanna Kandl, Mischa Kuball, Dorit Margreiter, Verena Landau, Hanno Otten, Blinky Palermo, Helga Paris, Inken Reinert, Peter Riedlinger, Merle Saß, Michael Scheffer, Thomas Struth, Slaven Tolj, Rebecca Wilton

Als Dokumentation/documentation: Zdenko Buzek, Till Exit, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Jenny Holzer, Sejla Kameric, Olaf Nicolai, Ross Sinclair

Opening on 06-FEB-09 at 7 p.m.

The GfZK is the result of a unique political event, the German reunification in1989, the 20th anniversary of which is celebrated in 2009. This is the starting point for the GfZK's investigation into the ways in which art responds to social situations and political changes. Art and politics should be perceived as running parallel. However, there are no plans to present the >art of the reunification< or to illustrate the events related with these changes through art. The goal of the project is >from a European perspective< to showcase artists who critically reflect their social environment, while investigating historical actions and processes, as well as the effects of change.

The title >Nonplaces, Places< has been borrowed from Karl Schlögel's book >Im Raume lesen wir die Zeit< (>Reading Time through Space. On the History of Civilisation and Geo-Politics<. München, Hanser Verlag 2003), which has been discussed within the context of debates on >spatial turn< in cultural theory. It implies the spatial dimensions of political and social processes: >What we have before our eyes are nonplaces, places which have disappeared again, sunk without trace, leaving nothing behind but a memory.<; (p.71) The project is linked with Schlögel's interest in reconnecting research issues with everyday life, with people's historical and contemporary situations. Due to the particular history of the GfZK's origins and its exhibition profile, there are many works in the museum's collection that reflect the political changes of 1989 in Central, Eastern and South Eastern Europe. The GfZK has collaborated with numerous artists, who engage with German, European and particularly Eastern and South-Eastern European history from their own perspective. A large number of works refer to certain places along with events and processes related to them, which concern recent and current German and European history, as well as the present.

The >Nonplaces, Places< project addresses shifts in the meanings associated with locations and their mutations from places to nonplaces as defined by Schlögel. The exhibition display, itinerary, catalogue, audio-guides and events accompanying the show discursively connect the artistic positions with socio-political questions in order to unite places, nonplaces, their history and present-day with political events and contemporary experiences.

In collaboration with Kay Bachmann and Philipp Paulsen (designers), Alexandra Kühnert and Lena Seik (educator), Uwe Fischer (musician/performer), Tristan Schulze (film/web), Janina Zeh (sociologist), Gerit-Jan Stecker (philosopher), Katja Naumann (historian), Christian Lotz (historian), and Thomas Klemm (curator), Britt Schlehahn (cultural scientist), Mathias Berek (cultural scientist) und Tobias Ebbrecht (film theorist).

Supported by Kulturstiftung des Freistaates Sachsen

Link to Collection