[spectre] Fwd: CFP: I Remember This (Vienna, 7-8 Oct 24)
Andreas Broeckmann LEU
andreas.broeckmann at leuphana.de
Sat Apr 27 20:18:16 CEST 2024
From: Andrea Neidhöfer
Date: Apr 26, 2024
Subject: CFP: I Remember This (Vienna, 7-8 Oct 24)
Vienna, Oct 7–08, 2024
Deadline: May 26, 2024
In 2004, ten more countries joined the EU, this large-scale expansion
brought about a change on the political map that was expected to have a
substantial impact on the political, social, economic and cultural
landscape. In the art field, this process of transformation has been the
subject of reflection, in particular, in works of art, as well as in
exhibitions and special programmes.
Organised by three different archives, the project Art Archive Study.
Before and After 2004 is an attempt to look more closely at this
specific moment in time by engaging with their holdings as corpora —
archival bodies — and examining them in relation to each other.
These archives are: Moderna galerija Archives in Ljubljana (founded in
1971), the Archive of Fine Arts in Prague (founded in 1984), and basis
wien – Archive and Documentation Centre (founded in 1997).
The work of these three archives is based on the compilation of material
published in the field of art, including so-called ephemera, that
documents exhibitions and performances, and the accompanying reception
in the media. By collecting, sorting, describing, conserving, making
accessible and exhibiting the archived material, the remnants of events
in the field of art are preserved and their contexts shown. However,
this does not lead to their quasi-reconstruction, or 1:1 reproductions,
forming instead a temporal distance to embedded knowledge, and
constructing new layers of information. The archives become containers
for legible traces, where knowledge gaps are implied along with blind
spots intrinsic to such documentation.
An archive conference is being organised in order to contribute
proactively to these processes.
The title of the conference I REMEMBER THIS is a reference to an artwork
from 1998 by Roman Ondak, who removed the electric sockets, ventilation
covers, and alarm sensors from the walls at City Gallery Prague, and
mounted them on a scaled-down version of the City Gallery room's
architecture — effectively doubling the space. It is one in a series of
works that, as Ina Blom describes, “explicitly connected the
vacillations of memory to the technical and institutional framework of
art display.” Following the idea of this artwork, its traces and
sources, the conference will pay particular attention to the sources and
context of information gathering, knowledge production, historical
material and associated personal and collective memories.
Scheduled to be held in Vienna on the 7th and 8th of October 2024, the
conference is to address a number of highly relevant and urgent issues
that emerged in the project Art Archive Study. Before and After 2004,
such as: - Have there been any changes in the field of art as a
consequence of the EU expansion and, if so, what are they and from what
perspective can they be described, especially in the light of the thesis
that these changes are still ongoing?
- What is the terminology and which categories were useful before the
expansion that might have lost their significance? - How was — or still
is — the focus on so-called Eastern European Art interwoven with the
business operations of banks and insurance companies in parallel to the
art market?
What are the priorities and incentives established by the development
and promotion of specific programmes and awards?
- What role did cultural capital play in entering (and taking over) the
markets of the newly developed Eastern European countries?
- What forms of critical artistic engagement can be identified in the
artistic production of this period regarding issues of identity, gender,
Eurocentrism and globalisation? Which criteria in the evaluation of
major thematic exhibitions or touring exhibitions with direct
connections to the new community space require readjustment?
- What were the specific opportunities and promises that the economic
and political opening brought for artists in the new member states?
We invite contributions related to the issues and questions proposed.
Suggested topics include, but are not limited to:
- Art, society and economy in the early 2000s, the EU expansion in 2004
and its impact on art production
- Exhibition history, large-scale exhibitions, projects
- East and Central and Eastern Europe CEE as historic terms and
established brands
- The art market — art fairs
- Academic and artistic mobility, programmes and impact
- Documentation as an artistic practice
- Oral History as an archival method
- Digital methods in art history, data analyses, visualisation -
Institutional transformation, networks, cooperation
- Globalisation, Eurocentrism and unofficial discourse
Contributors will have the option of working with the holdings and data
results of the organising archives themselves, while not being obliged
to do so.
Please submit proposals by email as soon as possible, to arrive no later
than 26 May 2024, to: office at basis-wien.at, Subject: Open Call
Proposals should include:
- A working title
- An abstract (300 words)
- A brief biography (150 words)
- Full contact details
Please send your documents in a single pdf file not exceeding 10 MB
Speakers' expenses for travel and accommodation are covered by the
conference, as well as a fee. Speakers will receive feedback on
conference participation as well as information on accommodation and
travel by the end of June.
Reference / Quellennachweis:
CFP: I Remember This (Vienna, 7-8 Oct 24). In: ArtHist.net, Apr 26,
2024. <https://arthist.net/archive/41750>.
More information about the SPECTRE
mailing list