Stahlskulpturen von Toni Schmale

-

Public Matters

Contemporary Art in the Belvedere Garden

Art – a public matter? Ever since their opening to the general public in the 1780s, the Belvedere Gardens have been used extensively as places for recreation and communality. The occasion of the 300th anniversary of the completion of the Upper Belvedere is a good opportunity to emphasize that they are clearly also places of art.

From May through September, an extensive contemporary sculpture project complements the Baroque sculpture program at the Belvedere’s three locations. Site-specific as well as existing works by international and local artists will connect all of the museum’s gardens along a path – from the main courtyard of the Lower Belvedere and its Privy Garden to the grand Baroque gardens of the Upper Belvedere and the modernist sculpture garden of the Belvedere 21 – highlighting how the gardens organically grew into an ensemble.

Public Matters follows an expanded concept of sculpture that includes time- and process-oriented approaches. As a critical homage, the show addresses the representation of power in the past and present as well as its transformation over time. In particular, the focus is on aspects of the public and the public sphere that emerge with and through art. The project is accompanied by a comprehensive publication featuring essays and texts on the works on display.

With works by Thomas Baumann, Renate Bertlmann, Louise Bourgeois, Verena Dengler, Carola Dertnig, VALIE EXPORT, Wil Frenken und Fria Elfen, Thomas Geiger, Roland Goeschl, Dan Graham, Thomas Houseago, Alfred Hrdlicka, Iman Issa, Anna Jermolaewa und Manfred Grübl, Kapwani Kiwanga, Brigitte Kowanz, Hans Kupelwieser, Marko Lulić, Goshka Macuga, Hans Op de Beeck, Ingeborg G. Pluhar, Maruša Sagadin, Toni Schmale, Kateřina Šedá, Socratis Socratous, Kara Walker, Lawrence Weiner, Lois Weinberger, Franz West, Fritz Wotruba, Heimo Zobernig

Curators: Christiane Erharter, Georg Lechner, Sergey Harutoonian, Axel Köhne, Claudia Slanar, Luisa Ziaja
Assistant curators: Miroslav Halak, Andrea Kopranovic

Impressions

Location Map

 

Explore the various locations of the works in this exhibition, from the main courtyard and Privy Garden of the Lower Belvedere to the grand Baroque gardens of the Upper Belvedere, and the modernist sculpture garden of the Belvedere 21, by using the site map as your guide.

Please note the special opening hours of the Privy Garden at the Lower Belvedere and the Belvedere 21 sculpture garden.

 

Access to the objects of the exhibition in the Privy Garden exclusively via the Lower Belvedere free of charge during museum opening hours.

 

Videos

 

Kateřina Šedá

Goshka Macuga

Renate Bertlmann

 

Louise Bourgeois

Toni Scmale

Kara Walker

 

Hans Op de Beeck

Franz West

Kapwani Kiwanga