Schule
Oberhuber
A collection as a program
29.04.2022
Opening:
May 4, 2022, 6 pm
Exhibition duration: May 4 – July 2, 2022. Extended until July 30, 2022.
Opening hours: Wednesday
– Saturday: 2 pm – 6 pm
University of Applied Arts Gallery at Heiligenkreuzerhof
Schönlaterngasse 5,
stairs 8, 1st floor, 1010 Vienna
Curated by Cosima Rainer and Robert Müller, the exhibition looks at the
seminal and multilayered practice of Oswald Oberhuber, its impact on the University of Applied Arts Vienna through the 1970s
to the 1990s, and an art-political discourse which remains relevant to this day.
As an artist, exhibition
organizer, critic and university rector, Oswald Oberhuber (1931-2020) embraced the idea of “permanent change”. His design
concepts cut across all areas of the university, including the founding of an art collection. The critical engagement with
“Austrian art history”, the university’s past as well as the effects of the Nazi regime on art and culture is pivotal to Oberhuber’s
practice.
The exhibition Schule Oberhuber uses the holdings of Collection and Archive
to examine the potential of a university collection to critically interrogate art historical narratives. At the former Imperial
and Royal School of Arts and Crafts female students were admitted as early as 1867. Their art works within the collection
allow a kind of alternative narrative to the prevailing art canon. Questioning the hierarchical separation of fine and applied
arts was central to the pedagogical program, which offers new perspectives on art production. Drawing on his exhibition Österreichische
Avantgarde 1900-1938. Ein unbekannter Aspekt (1976/77) (Austrian Avant-Garde 1900-1938. An Unknown Aspect), his large-scale
sculpture Museum im Museum (1978), as well as other publications and projects, the exhibition reflects and expounds
Oswald Oberhuber’s efforts for a revision of the prevailing canon of modernist art history and his proclamation for an alternative
“art school”.
Works by numerous students and artists from the collection exemplify the progressive teaching
approach at the former School of Arts and Crafts around 1900 and trace connections to the European avant-gardes as well as
fundamentally debating matters of artistic form.
These debates on form unfold through the artistic exhibition
design by the artist Robert Müller, which generates a space for the works to correspond with each other on different levels.
At the same time, one finds a narrative thread that guides through the exhibition with Oberhuber's forms of design and mediation,
such as his posters, furniture, and publications.
The exhibition locates Oswald Oberhuber’s commitment to
a broader view of modernism far beyond fantasies of purity. The exhibition is a “school within the school”, that gives Oberhuber's
work a new accessibility while continuing to address contemporary issues.
Including works a.o. by:
Georg Adams-Teltscher, Rudolf Baschant, Eduard Bäumer, Ilse Bernheimer, Camilla Birke, Eugenie Blöch, Sándor Bortnyk, Alfred
Buchta, Department Franz Čižek, Friedl Dicker-Brandeis, Oskar Donau, Anny Dollschein, Elsa Engel-Mainfelden, Mathilde Flögl,
Helene Gschliesser-Cornaro, Albert Paris Gütersloh, Oswald Haerdtl, Franz Hagenauer, Margarete Hamerschlag, Gerta Hammerschmied,
Carry Hauser, Josef Hoffmann, Franz Joseph Howanietz, Lilly Jacobsen, Hilde Jesser-Schmid, Lajos Kassák, Elisabeth Karlinsky,
Paul Kirnig, Erika Giovanna Klien, Elisabeth Kudisch-Zuba, Maria Likarz-Strauss, Richard Loederer, Oskar Kokoschka, Broncia
Koller-Pinell, Silvia Koller, František Kupka, Erich Mallina, Arnold Nechansky, Oswald Oberhuber, Dagobert Peche, Elisabeth
Pfanhauser, Otto Prutscher, Gertrude Neuwirth-König, Johanna Reismayer-Fritsche, Felice Rix, L.W. Rochowanski, Otto Rudolf
Schatz, Hugó Scheiber, Anna Schlechta-Truxa, Albert Schneck, Arnold Schönberg, Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky, Max Snischek,
Karl Steiner, Frieda Stökl, Oskar Strnad, Hans Strohofer, Marianne My Ullmann, Maria von Uchatius, Franz von Zülow, Otto
Erich, Wagner Trude Waehner, Vally Wieselthier, Eduard Wimmer-Wisgrill, Bruno Zuckermann, Workshop Emmy Zweybrück
Curated by: Cosima Rainer und Robert Müller
Project Team Collection and Archive:
Judith Burger, Silvia Herkt, Stefanie Kitzberger, Laura Egger-Karlegger, Eva Marie Klimpel, Bernadette Reinhold
Exhibition
design: Robert Müller
In September - November 2022, as a follow up to the exhibition, the University
Gallery will present an exhibition focusing on works from the collection by the artist Friedl Dicker-Brandeis
(1898 - 1944). Comprehensive publications will accompany both exhibitions.