United by AIDS - An Exhibition about Loss, Remembrance, Activism and Art in Response to HIV/AIDS
The extensive group show United by AIDS—An Exhibition about Loss, Remembrance, Activism and Art in Response to HIV/AIDS sheds light on the multifaceted and complex interrelation between art and HIV/AIDS from the 1980s to the present. It examines the blurring of the boundary between art production and HIV/AIDS activism and spotlights artists who have been leading voices in this creative discourse, which remains vital today. The presentation gathers positions that illustrate the diversity of the (artistic) response to the HI virus and AIDS, with an explicit focus on works that address themes such as isolation, transformation, and the inexorable passing of time and mortality in relation to the politics of the body and representation. Since the introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy in the second half of the 1990s, AIDS has widely come to be seen as a phenomenon of the past, with little significance for the life of our societies today. On the global scale, however, deaths due to complications from AIDS still number almost one million per year. Divided into four chapters, the exhibition seeks to untangle the complex and diverse narratives around HIV/AIDS and discuss their fragility in a contemporary perspective.
Featuring works by over 40 artists, the exhibition will be curated by Dr. Raphael Gygax. The exhibition will be accompanied by the publication of the anthology United by AIDS – An Anthology on Art in Response to HIV/AIDS.
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The extensive group show United by AIDS—An Exhibition about Loss, Remembrance, Activism and Art in Response to HIV/AIDS sheds light on the multifaceted and complex interrelation between art and HIV/AIDS from the 1980s to the present. It examines the blurring of the boundary between art production and HIV/AIDS activism and spotlights artists who have been leading voices in this creative discourse, which remains vital today. The presentation gathers positions that illustrate the diversity of the (artistic) response to the HI virus and AIDS, with an explicit focus on works that address themes such as isolation, transformation, and the inexorable passing of time and mortality in relation to the politics of the body and representation. Since the introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy in the second half of the 1990s, AIDS has widely come to be seen as a phenomenon of the past, with little significance for the life of our societies today. On the global scale, however, deaths due to complications from AIDS still number almost one million per year. Divided into four chapters, the exhibition seeks to untangle the complex and diverse narratives around HIV/AIDS and discuss their fragility in a contemporary perspective.
Featuring works by over 40 artists, the exhibition will be curated by Dr. Raphael Gygax. The exhibition will be accompanied by the publication of the anthology United by AIDS – An Anthology on Art in Response to HIV/AIDS.
Artists on show
- Absalon
- Andrea Bowers
- Anna Halprin
- Avram Finkelstein
- Ben Neill
- Charles Atlas
- Chéri Samba
- Cheryl Dunye
- Cookie Mueller
- David Wojnarowicz
- Donald Moffett
- Edward Thomasson
- Ellen Spiro
- Felix González-Torres
- fierce pussy
- General Idea
- Gran Fury
- Gregg Bordowitz
- Group Material
- Hudinilson Urbano Jr.
- Hunter Reynolds
- Jochen Klein
- Judith Bernstein
- Keith Haring
- Lili Reynaud Dewar
- Lyle Ashton Harris
- Marc Bauer
- Martin Wong
- Nan Goldin
- Nayland Blake
- Peter Kunz-Opfersei
- Prem Sahib
- Rafael Franca
- Real Madrid
- Rosa von Praunheim
- Stéphan Landry
- Sue Williamson
- Vittorio Scarpati
- Wolfgang Tillmans
- Zoe Leonard
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Summer is travel season for many, and museums around the world are rising to the occasion, hosting a bevy of must-see shows.
The extensive group show United by AIDS—An Exhibition about Loss, Remembrance, Activism and Art in Response to HIV/AIDS sheds light on the multifaceted and complex interrelation between art and HIV/AIDS from the 1980s to the present.