Exhibitions

HEADS OR TAILS. The quantification of life in the 19th century nach oben

until 26 February 2012
Museum of 19th Century Arts and Technology LA8

The exhibition highlights the triumph of numbers in all realms of life in the 19th century, a triumph whose impact is still being felt today. An exhibit like the finger calculating machine for children, the school hand-held calculator of the time, so to speak, is something we still find touching today. At the same time, it too testifies to the radical quantification of everyday life that occurred parallel to the introduction of compulsory education and led to the standardisation of once locally different units of measurement and calculation, to the exact geographical and statistical measurement of the world, to the high precision of wooden and metal weighing scales, cash registers and calculating machines.

The quantification of everything in the 19th century unified practical life on the one hand, while multiplying values and cultural interpretations on the other.
LA 8 Ausstellung
Altenburger Spielkarten, 2. Hälfte 19. Jahrhundert

Chto Delat? nach oben

until 12 February 2012
Staatliche Kunsthalle, Lichtentaler Allee 8a

The Staatliche Kunsthalle Baden-Baden is the first German institution to provide a substantial overview of the oeuvre of the Russian Collective Chto Delat? (What is to be done?). The collective was founded in early 2003 in St. Petersburg by a group of artists, critics, philosophers and writers. The exhibition title – “Chto Delat? in Baden-Baden: The Lesson on Dis-Consent” – maybe causes amazement not only because it uses a quote, which was also used by Lenin, but also because the immediate result of mentioning Baden-Baden and Russia in the same sentence seems to evoke a cliché image of wealthy men and young blonde ladies with flashy handbags. The works in the exhibition, however, reflect the complex political and social conditions of present day Russia, whereas the yearning for a debate on originally moral values of communism are unmistakably present.
Kunsthalle

William N. Copley nach oben

18 February 2011 to June 2012
Museum Frieder Burda, Lichtentaler Allee 8b

The extensive William N. Copley (1919–1996) retrospective at the Museum Frieder Burda features more than eighty works by the American, who as gallery owner, artist, author, and publisher operated as an important mediator between the Surrealists and the Pop Art movement since the mid-1940s and was one of the most unconventional personalities in the art scene.

The major part of the exhibited works stem from the artist’s estate, and many of them are being shown in public for the first time. The exhibition will also present the comprehensive body of work by the artist contained in the Frieder Burda Collection. Tying in with the tradition of Dada, Surrealism, and American Pop Art, William N. Copley’s paintings are an ironic examination of the erotic game played by men and women in all of its facets. The artist developed his unconventional style very early on, one which manifests itself first and foremost in the two main protagonists in his pictorial narratives: a shapely blonde in rosy nakedness chances upon a small man in a suit, armed with the symbols of venerability and sublime sex—an umbrella and a bowler. His oeuvre is an absolute pictorial homage to the motive forces of Eros. Yet Copley does not only rely on naïvely pretty pictures, but develops substance in terms of content that does not open up to the viewer until he or she takes a closer look and unlocks the connection between the depiction and the picture’s title.
William N. Copley, Kiss me
© Estate of William N. Copley / Copley LLC., New York

AFRICA THROUGH THEIR OWN EYES. Researching and Imagining a Continent nach oben

17 March to 2 September 2012
Museum of 19th Century Arts and Technology LA8

The exhibition presents a different aspect of the 19th century encounter with Africa. On show will be African cult and everyday objects from the collections of Reinhard Klimmt, Saarbrücken, the Morat Institute, Freiburg, and Dr. Kusch, Baden-Baden. These impressive sculptures, doors, masks and musical instruments will be confronted with the circumstances under which 19th century cultural historians and aesthetes discovered Africa. For example, outstanding African objects from the renowned collections will be accompanied by the question of how the cult objects from that continent became transformed into highly sought-after art objects in Europe. Were cult objects often effective, or solely effective, because they unfolded their religious powers when concealed? Did the exhibition or collection object necessarily have to be visible? What only had an absolute value for the cult, was given an auction or insurance value in Europe.
LA8 Africa through their own eyes
Emil Doerstling, The Joy of Prussian Love, 1890, oil on canvas, 80 x 94 cm
Deutsches Historisches Museum, Berlin

Selene States inaugurates 45cbm as a new studio space at the Staatliche Kunsthalle Baden-Baden nach oben

11 February 2012
Staatliche Kunsthalle, Lichtentaler Allee 8a

On Saturday, 11 February, 2012, at 7 PM the Staatliche Kunsthalle Baden-Baden is opening a new exhibition space for contemporary art: 45cbm. As a platform for young and emerging artists, 45cbm complements the regular exhibition program of the Kunsthalle. American artist Selene States will be inaugurating 45cbm with her installation "Swing Shoe Shop", a swing dance choreography accompanied by 52 pairs of original 1920-40's dance shoes. Visitors are invited to purchase these vintage shoes as ready-mades or to break them in at the party in the Café Kunsthalle after the opening.
Swing Shoe Shop

Frida Kahlo - "Pain and Passion" nach oben

Since February 28th 2009
Kunstmuseum Gehrke-Remund, Industriestraße 9a

Since February 28th 2009 the “Kunstmuseum Gehrke-Remund” shows over 100 paintings (licensed replicas) by Frieda Kahlo. The exhibition, with an exhibition surface over 600 sqm, is situated in an old Baden-Baden factory. In addition to paintings, dresses and jewellery, the museum shows the focus of the life of Frieda Kahlo, the “Casa Azul” (Blue House). Frieda Kahlo, already a legend in lifetime: Paintress – Wife of Diego Rivera – close friend with Picasso – mistress of Trotzki and Josephine Backer. She created 144 paintings during her short life.
Kahlo

Léger - Laurens. Tête-à-tête nach oben

23 June to 4 November 2012
Museum Frieder Burda, Lichtentaler Allee 8b

The contemporaries Fernand Léger (1881 - 1955) and Henri Laurens (1885 - 1954), represented in the collection Frieder Burda, will be confronted in this exhibition by their artistic forms of expression (painting and sculpture). Parallel themes, similar interests, as well as the friendship of the two artists are elaborated in this show. Many of the top-class works are loans of the Centre Pompidou in Paris.
Museum Frieder Burda