Early Years
Contemporary art is having its moment in Poland these days. Museums are being built, and new institutions, public as well as private, are emerging. Some artists鈥 names have become household words, and their practice 鈥 previously ignored or misinterpreted 鈥 benefits from a wider understanding and acceptance. The fact that the most central tract of land in the Polish capital will soon see the construction of the Museum of Modern Art speaks for itself.
The exhibition EARLY YEARS at KW Institute for Contemporary Art in Berlin wanders through the fields of institutional self-reflection. It searches for terms apt to describe the emergence of a museum of art in the present, of actual artistic, political and social discourses. A museum established amid the collapse of meta-narratives, aware of the institutional critique which had made the museum鈥檚 hegemonic nature a subject of dispute for decades, and, finally, familiar with the realities of the economic crisis 鈥 such a museum must rely not only on long-term strategic planning, but also contend with the moods, uncertainties and intuitions of the moment.
The 鈥渆arly years鈥 of the title usually describe that unique moment of an artistic biography when one remains naive and is only starting to learn from one鈥檚 own errors, but is at the same time at the height of ones鈥檚 authenticity, independence and heroism. The show is based in the concept of moving slightly into the future and using that futurist perspective to look back to the time of the great beginning, in a search for a history fitting for a founding myth.
For this exhibition the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw sought out the collaboration of artists with whom it had previously worked in its pioneering days. The Museum shared its concerns with the group, and they reciprocated by sharing their expectations of the new institution. The final product is a show that invites the viewer to scrutinize in retrospection the moment when everything is still possible, that moment of tense balance between hope and disillusionment, between engagement and compromise. This is the real protagonist of the show.
鈥濫arly Years鈥 is part of the project 鈥淭he Promised City鈥, a cultural initiative between Berlin and Warsaw with performances in Mumbai and Bucharest. Artists, curators and academics from Germany, Poland, India, and Romania have developed various new creative productions, all of which are interdisciplinary and revolve around subjects of the dreams, illusions, and promises of modern metropolises.
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Contemporary art is having its moment in Poland these days. Museums are being built, and new institutions, public as well as private, are emerging. Some artists鈥 names have become household words, and their practice 鈥 previously ignored or misinterpreted 鈥 benefits from a wider understanding and acceptance. The fact that the most central tract of land in the Polish capital will soon see the construction of the Museum of Modern Art speaks for itself.
The exhibition EARLY YEARS at KW Institute for Contemporary Art in Berlin wanders through the fields of institutional self-reflection. It searches for terms apt to describe the emergence of a museum of art in the present, of actual artistic, political and social discourses. A museum established amid the collapse of meta-narratives, aware of the institutional critique which had made the museum鈥檚 hegemonic nature a subject of dispute for decades, and, finally, familiar with the realities of the economic crisis 鈥 such a museum must rely not only on long-term strategic planning, but also contend with the moods, uncertainties and intuitions of the moment.
The 鈥渆arly years鈥 of the title usually describe that unique moment of an artistic biography when one remains naive and is only starting to learn from one鈥檚 own errors, but is at the same time at the height of ones鈥檚 authenticity, independence and heroism. The show is based in the concept of moving slightly into the future and using that futurist perspective to look back to the time of the great beginning, in a search for a history fitting for a founding myth.
For this exhibition the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw sought out the collaboration of artists with whom it had previously worked in its pioneering days. The Museum shared its concerns with the group, and they reciprocated by sharing their expectations of the new institution. The final product is a show that invites the viewer to scrutinize in retrospection the moment when everything is still possible, that moment of tense balance between hope and disillusionment, between engagement and compromise. This is the real protagonist of the show.
鈥濫arly Years鈥 is part of the project 鈥淭he Promised City鈥, a cultural initiative between Berlin and Warsaw with performances in Mumbai and Bucharest. Artists, curators and academics from Germany, Poland, India, and Romania have developed various new creative productions, all of which are interdisciplinary and revolve around subjects of the dreams, illusions, and promises of modern metropolises.