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Art Museum of Estonia 100. Open Collections: The Artist Takes the Floor 05/07/2019 – 10/11/2019

Kumu Art Museum
Adult: Kumu Art Museum
€14
  • Family: Kumu Art Museum
    €28
  • Discount: Kumu Art Museum
    €9
  • Adult ticket with donation: Art Museum of Estonia
    €20
Kollaaž: Paul Raud. Talu motiiv. 1896–1898. Eesti Kunstimuuseum / Kristi Kongi. Kavand installatsioonile „Nähtav nähtamatu“ (hommage Henn Roodele). 2019. Kunstniku loal / Jan Van Imschoot. Amore Dormiente. 2018. Kunstniku loal
Kollaaž: Paul Raud. Talu motiiv. 1896–1898. Eesti Kunstimuuseum / Kristi Kongi. Kavand installatsioonile „Nähtav nähtamatu“ (hommage Henn Roodele). 2019. Kunstniku loal / Jan Van Imschoot. Amore Dormiente. 2018. Kunstniku loal
Exhibition

Art Museum of Estonia 100. Open Collections: The Artist Takes the Floor

Asukoht: 2nd floor, Great Hall

The curator sent invitations to participate to 25 Estonian and international artists, who have helped celebrate the centennial of the Art Museum of Estonia by creating added value and a more diverse cultural context for the museum’s collection with their own works. The exhibition is meant to inspire a dialogue between contemporary artists and artistic heritage and to highlight the increasing role of contemporary art in the formation of new art historical concepts.

The relationships of modern and contemporary artists to the artistic legacy have had their twists and turns. In the 19th century, art academies taught painting via copying, so that students could share in the power of the classics; the art revolution of the 20th century fought against tradition, while in the 21st century artists often define their works as research projects, with the objective of putting our knowledge and customary art historical treatments to the test, as they are never final and can always reveal new, unknown sides. “It is a steadily growing trend that includes the historical account, the archive, the document, the act of excavating and unearthing, the memorial, the art of reconstruction and re-enactment, and the testimony favoured by a growing number of artists of varying ages and backgrounds. We can call this the ‘meta-historical mode’, an important aspect of much artwork that assumes a curatorial character,” writes Dieter Roelstraete. The museum of the 21st century observes with great interest the meta-historical activities of artists in order to define the process whose aim is to depict the past from the viewpoint of the present, as a transhistorical way of thinking.

Open Collections. The Artist Takes the Floor invites visitors to walk through a forest of art history and sees to it that the walk is a meandering journey, taking museum-goers from main paths to enjoyable side trails which have not yet been fully assessed and categorised in art history.In inviting the artists, the curator considered their creative profiles with the aim of involving different media. Several invited artists made the initial choice of pieces of interest based on the electronic museum database MuIS and the digital collection of the Art Museum of Estonia, which was followed by actual work with the collection. The works of art on exhibit cover the period from the 17th to the 21st centuries.

The exhibition stands out for its variety of media and approaches. Taavi Talve, Sten Saarits, Kirke Kangro, Jacob Jessen (DK), Jass Kaselaan, RLOALUARNA and Jonna Kina (FIN) present history from new points of view. Kaido Ole and Jaanus Samma surprise viewers with (auto)biographical approaches. Laura Kuusk and Marge Monko deal with feminist art practices. Merike Estna’s and Kristi Kongi’s installations are in dialogue with famous Estonian painters from the recent past. Alice Kask and Tõnis Saadoja work with historical art classics. Vladimir Dubossarsky (RUS) is interested in the topic of struggle in different eras. Jan Van Imschoot (BE) constructs the concept of Baroque anarchy. In addition to the invited artists, the exhibition includes several special projects. Four painting students from the Estonian Academy of Arts – Georg Kaasik, Joel Jõevee, Olev Kuma and Eero Alev – also get a chance to enter into dialogue with art heritage. The project curated by Maria Arusoo is centred around the theme of the female body in Aili Vint’s prints and the Serbian artist Ivana Bašić’s sculptures. Under the keyword “afterlife of flowers”, the artists Foxy Haze and Jennifer Steinkamp (USA) explore the afterlife of now marginalised art genres in contemporary art projects.

The exhibition has been structured as a lexicon, with the keywords describing the projects acting as signposts. Participating artists and curators explain in the exhibition booklet why they have chosen certain works of art and how they have approached them.

Curator: Eha Komissarov
Guest curator: Maria Arusoo
Coordinator: Tiiu Parbus
Exhibition design: Neeme Külm
Concept of the signature graphic design of the exhibition: Asko Künnap
Graphic design: Tuuli Aule

Participating artists:
Eero Alev, Ivana Bašić, Vladimir Dubossarsky, Merike Estna, Foxy Haze, Jacob Jessen, Joel Jõevee, Georg Kaasik, Kirke Kangro, Jass Kaselaan, Alice Kask, Jonna Kina, Kristi Kongi, Laura Kuusk, Olev Kuma, Marge Monko, Kaido Ole, RLOALUARNAD, Tõnis Saadoja, Sten Saarits, Jaanus Samma, Jennifer Steinkamp, Taavi Talve and Jan Van Imschoot.

We thank:
the Estonian Embassy in Moscow, the Department of Photography of the Estonian Academy of Arts; the Center for Contemporary Arts Estonia; Templon, Paris – Brussels; Marlborough Gallery, New York and London; greengrassi, London; Novembar Gallery, Belgrad; Anna Tamm; Valge Kuup