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Mladen Stilinović
17 September
– 2 November 2008
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Mladen Stilinović, An Artist who Cannot Speak
English is no Artist, 1992
Courtesy Mladen Stilinović, photo: Rainer
Iglar |
Mladen Stilinović, Ambijent sa novcima / Money
Environment (Detail), 1980 (2008)
und O novcu i nulama / On money and Zeroes
(Detail), 1976–2006
Courtesy Mladen Stilinović, photo: Rainer Iglar |
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Opening
Tuesday, 16 September
2008, 7 pm
To be opened by Dr. Beate
Palfrader, head of the Tyrolean’s government office for
cultural affairs
Dr. Hedwig Saxenhuber, curator and co-editor of springerin –
Hefte für Gegenwartskunst, Vienna, will speak about the
exhibition
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Mladen
Stilinović is one of the most important contemporary
artists from
Croatia. His work is being presented for the first time in a solo
exhibition at an Austrian art institution.
In drawings, paintings, installations, objects, videos, texts and
artist’s books, Mladen Stilinović investigates the codes and
conditions of late socialist production and consumption.
Stilinović’s interest focuses on the relations between the
languages of art and ideology, which he questions and transforms by
philosophical-poetic and ironic means.
From 1975 to 1979, Stilinović – whose creative origins lay in
experimental film and poetry – was a member of the Grupa
Sestorice Autora (Group of Six Artists), who presented their
exhibitions and performances on the streets of Yugoslavia’s
cities. Stilinović continues to pursue this experimental starting point
– dealing with the examination of everyday (socialist) life
– in his current work, in which he interweaves the
increasingly
precarious political situation after Tito’s death with the
equally precarious position of art and the artist. Stilinović links the
real and symbolic decline in Tito’s power, the degeneration
of a
heroic cult into a cliché with the deterioration of the
Modernist artistic language. His cycle “Exploitation of the
Dead” (1984-90) is exemplary of this; Stilinović uses
poetic-ironic pictorial and linguistic inventions referring to Russian
Constructivism, Socialist Realism and the geometric abstraction of the
1950s − all three being artistic tendencies and styles that
experienced exploitation and depletion, thereby losing their
artistic-symbolic significance.
After the fall of Communism, Stilinović extended his investigations to
include different artistic and social fields that defined life
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and not only that of artists – under the auspices of the new
political regime. One programmatic work dealing with this question is
his self-reflective poster in attractive shades of pink, which bears
the sentence “An Artist Who Cannot Speak English Is No
Artist” (1994-96). By this means, Stilinović subsumes into a
brief, ironic phrase the dilemma of artists from former Eastern Bloc
countries and their structural exclusion from, yet simultaneous
(potential) participation in the Western art business and art market.
The exhibition shows a series of interlocking work complexes, e.g. on
the topic of “Money” or, more recently, on the
poverty of
those “Bag People” who carry their few belongings
in
plastic bags hoping to sell them at informal markets.
The installation “Submit to Public Debate” presents
the
public with the hackneyed language of politics in both writing and
sound; a scenario that conveys melancholy without being serious in a
way quite characteristic of Stilinović’s art.
“Some of my works talk about the colour white, pain, silence,
nothing... Those are the works about emotional states of mind. How can
I talk to myself about money? On the political or emotional
level? Money is there, and there is not any. And we are here, the
artists from the so-called East, but we are not. The question of pain
is strictly an individual issue. It can be expressed only by the word
‘pain’. As one boring tautology. Such is life and
such is
art, linking things which are not interlinked. Money, pain,
tautology.” (Mladen Stilinović, 2004)
Mladen Stilinović was born in Belgrade in 1947; he lives and works in
Zagreb. |
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Mladen Stilinović, Artist
at work, 1978. Courtesy Mladen Stilinović |
Mladen Stilinović, Double
Indemnity, 1980. Courtesy Mladen Stilinović |
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The
exhibition is based on collaboration with Platform Garanti –
Contemporary Art Center, Istanbul, Turkey, and the Van Abbemuseum,
Eindhoven, Netherlands.
Thanks to:
Charles Esche
Vasif Kortun
Annemarie Türk and KulturKontakt Austria |
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Galerie
im Taxispalais Maria-Theresien-Str. 45 A-6020 Innsbruck
Öffnungszeiten: Di-So 11-18, Do 11-20 Uhr LeseRAUM:
Di-So 11-18, Do 11-20 Uhr
T +43/512/508-3172, -3173 F 508-3175 taxis.galerie@tirol.gv.at |
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