Camera Austria International

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96 | 2006

  • HANS-JÜRGEN HAFNER
    Anna Oppermanns Ensembles
  • ANNA OPPERMANN
  • MARINA GRŽINIĆ
    IRWIN: NSK Guards
  • IRWIN
  • REINHARD BRAUN
    Martin Osterider: Self-reflective Pictures, Photographic Spaces
  • MARTIN OSTERIDER
  • SANDRA KRIŽIĆ ROBAN
    Sofija a.k.a. Silvia Potocki: Sofijas Gaze
  • SOFIJA a.k.a. SILVIA POTOCKI
  • RUTH SONDEREGGER
    Critical Theory of Social Pictures IV

Preface

“What is bare life?” is one of three topics covered by the documenta 12 magazines project, in which Camera Austria is participating together with more than seventy other international (art) magazines and to which we will be regularly contributing until summer 2007. A first contribution on the topical relevance of the social-activist and photo-political work of Jo Spence (Camera Austria No. 94) was followed by a second piece on Susan Meiselas in Camera Austria No. 95, that focused on the question of a national picture archive for Kurdistan a people without a nation on which the photographer worked for several years. In this issue we are presenting two further documenta contributions that follow on in different ways from the questions examined by Spence and Meiselas: The Slovenian artist group IRWIN, introduced in an essay by Marina Grzinic, present their “NSK Gards” work for the first time, that arose from their long-term “NSK State in Time” project, and in which they artistically deal with a fictitious state and its insignia. This state is a virtual entity, it has no territory precisely because it has always been claimed that the Balkan War was waged for territorial reasons. IRWIN formed up as early as 1983 and has contributed to a changed reception of Eastern-European art with their (cultural) political activities and artistic interventions. In the “NSK Gards” project, IRWIN lends the fictitious state of “NSK State in Time” the insignia of a nation (the flag with a coat of arms, passports) putting these into the real military context, by having these insignia guarded by real military guards of various nations.

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Camera Austria International 96 | 2006
Preface

“What is bare life?” is one of three topics covered by the documenta 12 magazines project, in which Camera Austria is participating together with more than seventy other international (art) magazines and to which we will be regularly contributing until summer 2007. A first contribution on the topical relevance of the social-activist and photo-political work of Jo Spence (Camera Austria No. 94) was followed by a second piece on Susan Meiselas in Camera Austria No. 95, that focused on the question of a national picture archive for Kurdistan a people without a nation on which the photographer worked for several years. In this issue we are presenting two further documenta contributions that follow on in different ways from the questions examined by Spence and Meiselas: The Slovenian artist group IRWIN, introduced in an essay by Marina Grzinic, present their “NSK Gards” work for the first time, that arose from their long-term “NSK State in Time” project, and in which they artistically deal with a fictitious state and its insignia. This state is a virtual entity, it has no territory precisely because it has always been claimed that the Balkan War was waged for territorial reasons. IRWIN formed up as early as 1983 and has contributed to a changed reception of Eastern-European art with their (cultural) political activities and artistic interventions. In the “NSK Gards” project, IRWIN lends the fictitious state of “NSK State in Time” the insignia of a nation (the flag with a coat of arms, passports) putting these into the real military context, by having these insignia guarded by real military guards of various nations.

Subjects pertaining to picture politics can also be discerned in the work of German concept artist Anna Oppermann: Her sprawling installations were made accessible again at a solo exhibition almost ten years after her death at Berlin’s Galerie Kienzle & Gmeiner. The work entitled “The economic aspect” was central to Hans-Jürgen Hafner’s essay: In the texts it contains, the ensemble revolves around questions of mediating and marketing not only art. The trigger and core motif is an objet trouvé. The picture of a dealer pointing at the range of goods spread out before him. The “motif” is at the same time an “occasion”: For Oppermann a moment at which everyday observations of dealer behaviour, e.g. personality traits observed in oneself and in others, marketing strategies, consciously or subliminally, materialise, take on form and thus become representable/sayable. Against this backdrop, the artist collects and organises information of varying quality, makes it communicable in a kind of thought-space, into which she organises associatively found sources with great attention to the motivation and criteria of her processes of selection and organisation, staging them by means of complex picture-text relations.

In addition to these contributions to documenta 12, we are also presenting the work of Austrian artist Martin Osterider in an introductory essay by Reinhard Braun: Under the impression of the technological changes undergone by the photographic medium, the image is perceived once again as self-reflective and as the intersection of social and political practices. In her contribution on the works of Slovenian photographer Silvia Potocki, Sandra Krizic Roban focuses on the aspect of changing allocations of meaning against the backdrop of the artist’s strategy of continuously recontextualising her photographic material in processes of rearrangement and relayering.

We hope that the range of topics dealt with in this issue will keep the debate about photography’s contribution to current artistic and politico-cultural issues captivating for our readers. We are already looking forward with great anticipation to next year when we will be publishing the 100th issue of Camera Austria!

Christine Frisinghelli

Entries

Forum

FRANZISKA KLOSE

KATHERINE NEWBEGIN

YOLANDA DEL AMO

ANNA LEHMANN-BRAUNS

JENNIFER LONG

DEBBY HUYSMANS

DONATELLA DI CICCO

DANIEL GASENZER

Exhibitions

Who is the Quenn?
Das Achte Feld. Geschlechter, Leben und Begehren in der Kunst seit 1960
Museum Ludwig Köln
GISLIND NABAKOWSKI

Herkulische Hysterie. Isa Genzken
Galerie im Taxispalais, Innsbruck
REINHARD BRAUN

Verrottender Luxus. Isa Genzken
Secession, Wien
MAREN LÜBBKE-TIDOW

A.C.A.D.E.M.Y: Exhibitions, Projects, Lectures, Symposia
Kunstverein Hamburg; Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst; Antwerpen; Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven
ANNETT BUSCH

Shomei Tomatsu: Skin of the Nation
Japan Society Gallery, New York; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Fotomuseum Winterthur
WOLFGANG BRÜCKLE

Graz: Ausstellungsrundgang steirischer herbst
ULRICH TRAGATSCHNIG

Gefährliche Kreuzungen. Die Grammatik der Toleranz.
Künstlerische Interventionen im öffentlichen Raum, München
SØNKE GAU

Fiona Tan: Mirror Maker
Kunsthallen Brandts, Odense; Landesgalerie Linz am Oberösterreichischen Landesmuseum; Bergen Kunstmuseum; Pori Art Museum
MAREN RICHTER

The Atlas Group (1989 – 2004). A Project by WALID RAAD
Hamburger Bahnhof Museum für Gegenwart, Berlin
RAINER BELLENBAUM

Human Nature. Second ICP Triennial of Photography and Video: Ecotopia
International Center of Photography, New York
RACHEL BAUM

Spectacular City. Photographing the Future
Netherlands Architecture Institute, Rotterdam; NRW-Forum Kultur und Wirtschaft, Düsseldorf
STEVEN HUMBLET

Bas Jan Ader. Please don’t leave me
Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam
Jan Verwoert: Bas Jan Ader. In search of the Miraculous
Afterall Books (One Work Series), London 2006
YOANN VAN PARYS

Conceptualised Performative Space. Stephen Willats, Gillian Wearing
Victoria Miro, London; Maureen Paley, London
NIELS HENRIKSEN

Books

John Gossage: Berlin in the Time of the Wall
Loosestrife Editions, Bethesda 2004
CAROLIN FÖRSTER

Heinrich Schwarz: Techniken des Sehens
Fotohof edition, Salzburg 2006
ROLF SACHSSE

Eva Munz, Christian Kracht, Lukas Nikol:
Die totale Erinnerung. Kim Jong Ils Nordkorea
Rogner & Bernhard bei Zweitausendeins, Berlin 2006
KRYSTIAN WOZNICKI

Martin Paar, Gerry Badger: The Photobook. A History
Phaidon Press, New York
FRIEDRICH TIETJEN

Ingeborg Strobl: Photo Roman (2). A Photo Novel by Ingeborg Strobl
Fotohof edition, Salzburg 2006
RUDOLF SAGMEISTER

Aftermath. World Trade Center Archive by Joel Meyerowitz
Phaidon Press, New York 2006
CARLO MCCORMICK

Michael Diers: Fotografie Film Video. Beiträge zu einer kritischen Theorie des Bildes
Philo & Philo Fine Arts (Fundus-Bücher, Bd. 162), Hamburg 2006
VERENA KUNI

Imprint

Publisher: Manfred Willmann. Owner: Verein CAMERA AUSTRIA, Labor für Fotografie und Theorie.
All: Lendkai 1, A-8020 Graz.

Editors Graz: CChristine Frisinghelli, Tanja Gassler

Editor Berlin: Maren Lübbke-Tidow

Copy editing: Marie Röbl

Translations: Wilfried Prantner, Richard Watts, Aileen Derieg, Irena und Benno Meyer-Wehlak, John Doherty, Don Mader, Margret Berki, Marina Miladinov.