Maria Anwander | |
---|---|
Born | 1980 (age 40–41) Bregenz, Austria |
Nationality | Austrian |
Known for | Conceptual art |
Maria Anwander (born 1980) [1] is an Austrian conceptual artist who specializes in performance and installation art. Her work has been featured in multiple solo exhibitions in Europe and the United States since 2009. [1] Much of her work focuses on challenging art institutions and their conventions. [2]
Anwander was born in Bregenz in 1980. [1] She studied Theater, Film, and Media Science at the University of Vienna, graduating in 2003. [1] She earned a degree from the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna in 2008. [1]
In 2013, Anwander stated that "my work mainly questions authenticity of artworks and the gap between the art-market and the artist as participator." [3] She adds that "my latest works deal with issues of collecting, ownership and authorship. Hereby I'm highly interested in the creation of notional images by removing other already existing images. The dematerialization and deconstruction of images into pure descriptions of themselves and vice versa is part of my deliberations." [3]
Anwander currently lives and works in Berlin, Germany. [1]
Anwander created an installation of the exhibition labels she had stolen from art galleries and museums. [4] The installation is also intended as a travel diary and Anwander states that its purpose is to give the viewer "access to my innermost, to the works accompanying my artistic career." [4]
Anwander used tissues to remove the ink from the pages of an art magazine which purported to be the world's leading art magazine, leaving only the blank magazine and the ink from the pages on the tissues. [5]
Anwander filmed a 32-minute video where she met with Adolfo Profumo, a psychoanalyst, in New York City who attempts to tell her about her personality through looking through her portfolio. [6]
In 2010, Anwander entered the MoMA as a regular visitor and, unauthorized, French-kissed a wall she had chosen. [7] [8] [9] She then affixed a label identical to the labels used by MoMA, explaining her rationale and explaining that she "uses art institutions as forums where hierarchical, social and economic models can be tested and reimagined. This piece is a part of a series of artworks and performances, which Anwander has developed since 2004, playing with the link between art institutions and market." [8]
Anwander staged an intervention in a public space where a public dance floor was installed in the middle of a public park in Innsbruck, Austria. [6] A light switch, disco ball, loudspeaker, and lights were installed. When the light switch was pressed, lights turned on and music began to play for the duration of one song. [6]
In 2012, Anwander staged an intervention and placed a block of limestone weighing two tons in the city centre of Luxembourg. [7] [10]
Anwander and Aubrecht created a 100 x 280 cm sculpture which read, "JUST ANOTHER WORK OF ART WHICH WILL NOT GO DOWN IN HISTORY." [6]
In collaboration with Aubrecht, Anwander placed embroidered pillows with statistics about poverty, malnutrition or wealth distribution on couches in luxury apartments, hotel lobbies and exclusive restaurants in Mexico City. [6] The work was intended to be a response to the "increasing development of parallel societies." [6]
Video art is an art form which relies on using video technology as a visual and audio medium. Video art emerged during the late 1960s as new consumer video technology such as video tape recorders became available outside corporate broadcasting. Video art can take many forms: recordings that are broadcast; installations viewed in galleries or museums; works streamed online, distributed as video tapes, or DVDs; and performances which may incorporate one or more television sets, video monitors, and projections, displaying live or recorded images and sounds.
Niki de Saint Phalle was a French-American sculptor, painter, and filmmaker. Widely noted as one of the few female monumental sculptors, Saint Phalle was also known for her social commitment and work.
Kara Elizabeth Walker is an American contemporary painter, silhouettist, print-maker, installation artist, filmmaker, and professor who explores race, gender, sexuality, violence, and identity in her work. She is best known for her room-size tableaux of black cut-paper silhouettes. Walker has been the Tepper Chair in Visual Arts at the Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University since 2015.
Hito Steyerl is a German filmmaker, moving image artist, writer, and innovator of the essay documentary. Her principal topics of interest are media, technology, and the global circulation of images. Steyerl holds a PhD in Philosophy from the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. She is currently a professor of New Media Art at the Berlin University of the Arts, where she co-founded the Research Center for Proxy Politics, together with Vera Tollmann and Boaz Levin.
Vanessa Beecroft is an Italian-born American contemporary performance artist; she also works with photography, video art, sculpture, and painting. Many of her works have made use of professional models, sometimes in large numbers and sometimes naked or nearly so, to stage tableaux vivants. She works in the United States, and is based in Los Angeles as of 2019. Her early work was focused on gender and appeared to be autobiographical; her later work is focused on race. Starting in 2008 she began working with Kanye West on collaborations and commercial projects.
Sherrie Levine is an American photographer, painter, and conceptual artist. Some of her work consists of exact photographic reproductions of the work of other photographers such as Walker Evans, Eliot Porter and Edward Weston.
Kiki Smith is a West German-born American artist whose work has addressed the themes of sex, birth and regeneration. Her figurative work of the late 1980s and early 1990s confronted subjects such as AIDS and gender, while recent works have depicted the human condition in relationship to nature. Smith lives and works in the Lower East Side, New York City, and the Hudson Valley, New York State.
Janine Antoni is a Bahamian–born American artist, who creates contemporary work in performance art, sculpture, and photography. Antoni's work focuses on process and the transitions between the making and finished product, often portraying feminist ideals. She uses her body, both as an entity, or paying particular attention to body parts as tools, utilizing her mouth, hair, eyelashes, and, through technological scanning, the brain, to perform everyday activities to create her artwork. Her work blurs the distinction between performance art and sculpture. She currently resides in Brooklyn, New York.
Cornelia Ann Parker OBE, RA is an English visual artist, best known for her sculpture and installation art.
Iris Haeussler is a conceptual and installation art artist of German origin. She lives in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Many of Iris Haeussler's works are detailed, hyperrealistic installations that visitors can decode as narrative stories. Recurring topics in her work include historic, cultural and social origins, such as family ties and relationships, and physical conditions, such as geography architecture and housing.
Bingyi, born in 1975 in Beijing, is a Chinese artist, curator, scholar, architectural designer, cultural critic and activist.
Nicole Eisenman is an American artist primarily known for her paintings. Eisenman was a professor at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson from 2003 to 2009. She has been awarded the Guggenheim fellowship (1996), the Carnegie Prize (2013), and has thrice been included in the Whitney Biennial. On September 29, 2015, she won the MacArthur "Genius Grant" award for "restoring the representation of the human form a cultural significance that had waned during the ascendancy of abstraction in the 20th century". Eisenman currently lives and works in Brooklyn. Her Williamsburg studio is managed by Sam Roeck.
Michal Rovner, also known as Michal Rovner Hammer, is an Israeli contemporary artist, she is known for her video, photo, and cinema artwork. Rovner is an internationally known with exhibitions at major museums, including the Louvre (2011) and the Whitney Museum of American Art (2002).
Jennie C. Jones is an African-American artist living and working in Brooklyn, New York. Her work has been described, by Ken Johnson, as evoking minimalism, and paying tribute to the cross-pollination of different genres of music, especially jazz. As an artist, she connects most of her work between art and sound. Such connections are made with multiple mediums, from paintings to sculptures and paper to audio collages. In 2012, Jones was the recipient of the Joyce Alexander Wien Prize, one of the biggest awards given to an individual artist in the United States. The prize honors one African-American artist who has proven their commitment to innovation and creativity, with an award of 50,000 dollars. In December 2015 a 10-year survey of Jones's work, titled Compilation, opened at the Contemporary Arts Museum in Houston, Texas.
Monica Bonvicini is an Italian artist.
Angela Su is a Hong Kong artist known for her scientific drawings and her performance works. In 2014, Su was featured in Art Radar on a list of influential Asian female artists making an impact on the international art stage.
Marine Hugonnier is a French and British filmmaker and contemporary artist known for her work exploring perception, and the ways in which our point of view determines meaning. Her interest in the relationship between language and image informs her diverse body of works, which includes films, photography, works on paper, performance, sculpture, and installation.
Wang Xin is a Chinese artist whose artworks take the form of installations, moving images, and new media. She was born in Yichang, Hubei, China and currently lives and works in Shanghai. She graduated from China Academy of Art with a B.F.A. in 2007, then went on to earn her master's degree from the Art Institute of Chicago in 2011. In 2007, Xin received the Pierre Huber Creation Prize Award of Excellence. Galleries, artists, art agents, and artworks are often the subject of her work.
Claudia Comte is a Swiss artist. Comte works in a variety of media including sculpture, engraving, installation murals and painting.
Ranu Mukherjee is an Indian-American artist and educator based in San Francisco, California. Her multi-media work combines film and painting in what she has coined a "hybrid film." She co-founded the arts collective, Orphan Drift.