Breaking Down Walls! The Collections
The Museum is taking the 20th anniversary of its site on the M枚nchsberg as an opportunity to place a focus on increasing the visibility of the collections entrusted to it. For most of the year, two levels on the M枚nchsberg (1 and 3) will be used for four exhibitions from the collections, though strictly speaking these are two exhibitions that will be modified halfway through their run to create new presentations with new focal points. The concept and content of these four parts are revealed in their titles.
The exhibitions for the anniversary year are presented by the Museum der Moderne Salzburg in cooperation with the Generali Foundation.
The exhibition Breaking Down Walls! reflects on the insights of the intellectual movement known as the spatial turn, which emphasizes the vital importance of space or the conception of space as an analytical instrument. Its focus is not just on the static space of geometry but on space as a phenomenon shaped, experienced, and coded by humans. This shift of significance toward a construct informed by social and cultural factors is fueled not only by the growing mobility of our society, but also by forced migration, territorial conflicts, and changes in the climate.
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The Museum is taking the 20th anniversary of its site on the M枚nchsberg as an opportunity to place a focus on increasing the visibility of the collections entrusted to it. For most of the year, two levels on the M枚nchsberg (1 and 3) will be used for four exhibitions from the collections, though strictly speaking these are two exhibitions that will be modified halfway through their run to create new presentations with new focal points. The concept and content of these four parts are revealed in their titles.
The exhibitions for the anniversary year are presented by the Museum der Moderne Salzburg in cooperation with the Generali Foundation.
The exhibition Breaking Down Walls! reflects on the insights of the intellectual movement known as the spatial turn, which emphasizes the vital importance of space or the conception of space as an analytical instrument. Its focus is not just on the static space of geometry but on space as a phenomenon shaped, experienced, and coded by humans. This shift of significance toward a construct informed by social and cultural factors is fueled not only by the growing mobility of our society, but also by forced migration, territorial conflicts, and changes in the climate.
Artists on show
- Alfred Kubin
- Annemarie Avramidis
- Annerose Riedl
- Branko Lenart
- Drago Julius Prelog
- Egon Schiele
- Erwin Wurm
- Franz Kapfer
- Gelitin
- Georg Eisler
- George Grosz
- Georgia Creimer
- Gregor Sailer
- Günter Brus
- Gustav Klimt
- Käthe Kollwitz
- Kathi Hofer
- Klaus Pamminger
- Lois Weinberger
- Luiza Margan
- Manfred Grübl
- Manon
- Margherita Spiluttini
- Marjetica Potr膷
- Markus Schinwald
- Martha Jungwirth
- Martha Rosler
- Martin Walde
- Oskar Kokoschka
- Renée Green
- Rixdorfer Drucke
- Seiichi Furuya
- Simona Reisch
- Sue Webster
- Sylvie Fleury
- Thomas Stimm
- Tim Noble
- Tim Noble
- Ulrike Grossarth
- Werner Feiersinger
- Wolfgang Herzig
- Yan Duyvendak