NO PITY!
'An artist's duty is to reflect the times.' (Nina Simone)
19.3. – 6.6.2020
Vlasta Delimar, Laura Fitzgerald, Parastou Forouhar, Vlatka Horvath, Eva Kotátková, Evelyn Loschy, Veronika Merklein, Carol Rama, Denise Schellmann, Nancy Spero
One to One-Vernissage: Thursday, 7.5. - 9.5.2020 between 11 - 20h
We are pleased to reopen the gallery with the exhibition NO PITY! on 7 May. In times of the corona crisis it is unfortunately not possible for us to organize a vernissage as we knew it until then. For this reason, we will adapt to the situation and, as always, focus on performative action
The vernissage of the new exhibition "NO PITY!" will take place over three days. After you have registered for an appointment - duration 15 minutes each - you can visit the exhibition, whilst sipping at a glass of wine and get a personal guided tour with one of the artists and the gallery owner. The three artists living in Vienna: Denise Schellmann (Thursday, 7.5.), Evelyn Loschy (Friday, 8.5.) and Veronika Merklein (Saturday, 9.5.) will guide you through the current exhibition on the selected opening days between 11 and 20 o'clock. Please do not forget to bring your face mask and appetite for art.
Here you can book your personal vernissage date > online reservation
Here you can see the online opening, 19.3.2020 > ROOM 1 and ROOM 2
No Pity!
exhibition view
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exhibition view
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Carol Rama, Cadeau, 2005, mixed media on paper (watercolor, black felt-tip pen), 16,4 x 20 cm
http://www.galerie-stock.net/images/ausstellungen/bilder/2020/No_Pity/CarolRama_450px.jpg
Evelyn Loschy, studies of psychophysical destruction, 2020, watercolour, 44 x 36 cm
http://www.galerie-stock.net/images/ausstellungen/bilder/2020/No_Pity/Loschy_skizze1.jpg
Evelyn Loschy, studies of psychophysical destruction, 2020, watercolour, 44 x 36 cm
http://www.galerie-stock.net/images/ausstellungen/bilder/2020/No_Pity/Loschy_skizze2_450px.jpg
Evelyn Loschy, in between I, 2010, performance, 16 photos, digital photography, 53 x 73 cm, edition: 5+2 AP
Nancy Spero, explicit, 1999, Handprinting and printed collage on paper, 62 x 74 cm
Nancy Spero, Licit Exp, 1974, hand printing collage on paper, 29 x 33 cm
http://www.galerie-stock.net/images/ausstellungen/bilder/2020/No_Pity/nancy_spero_IMG_1014_450px.jpg
Nancy Spero, The drowning of a witch, 1996, mixed media on paper (drawing, watercolor, acrylic), 62 x 49 cm
http://www.galerie-stock.net/images/ausstellungen/bilder/2020/No_Pity/nancy_spero_witch_450px.jpg
Forouhar Parastou, Flashing, 2009, photograph on aluminum dibond, edition: 1/5
http://www.galerie-stock.net/images/ausstellungen/bilder/2020/No_Pity/Parastou_FLASHING_450px.jpg
Forouhar Parastou, Thousand and one days, 2009, series II, digital print on cardboard (Hahnemühle Photo Rag), 30 x 40 cm, edition: 7
Vlasta Delimar, Injustices,1992, collage (b/w photo, lace), 56 x 46 cm
http://www.galerie-stock.net/images/ausstellungen/bilder/2020/No_Pity/delimar_9_injustices_450px.jpg
Vlasta Delimar, Untitled, 1992, graphic, screen print, 47 x 35 cm, edition: 13/40
Vlasta Delimar, In Rovinj, 2002, unique b/w photo, vintage photo, 73 x 80 cm
http://www.galerie-stock.net/images/ausstellungen/bilder/2020/No_Pity/1_Delimar_In-Rovinj_450px.jpg
Veronika Merklein, Ich habe nichts gesagt / I didn‘t say anything, 2011, photography, Photo RAG, series of 4 images
Veronika Merklein, Ich habe nichts gesagt / I didn‘t say anything, 2011, photography, Photo RAG, series of 4 images
http://www.galerie-stock.net/images/ausstellungen/bilder/2020/No_Pity/Bild2-Das_-ist_Sid_450px.jpg
Veronika Merklein, Ich habe nichts gesagt / I didn‘t say anything, 2011, photography, Photo RAG, series of 4 images
Veronika Merklein, Ich habe nichts gesagt / I didn‘t say anything, 2011, photography, Photo RAG, series of 4 images
Vlatka Horvath, And Counting (Two), 2011, object, 32 x 32 x 7 cm
Vlatka Horvath, Anatomies 15, 2008, collage, 22,9 x30,5
Denise Schellmann, Antikörper, 2020, diptych, mixed media on paper, each 29,7 x 21 cm
Denise Schellmann, Zauberknoten, 2020, diptych, mixed media on paper, each 8 x 5,5 cm
Denise Schellmann, Kontaktfreude, 2020, diptych, mixed media on paper, each 8 x 5,5 cm
Eva Kotátková, Untitled, 2013, collage on paper, 30 x 21 cm
http://www.galerie-stock.net/images/ausstellungen/bilder/2020/No_Pity/EvaKotakova9_450px.jpg
Vlasta Delimar, Barths, b/w photo, 1992, 40 x 30 cm
http://www.galerie-stock.net/images/vlasta_delimar/pictures/VD_Bilder_450px/Barhtes1992-1_450px.jpg
Laura Fitzgerald, Rock insomnia, 2019, artist crayon on paper, 50 x 70cm
Laura Fitzgerald, Try harder, 2019, artist crayon on paper, 50 x 70 cm
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Laura Fitzgerald, P45, 2018/19, HD Video, Projection/and or digital monitor, 44.59 mins
VIDEO > http://laurafitzgeraldfrominch.com/project/p45/
Whilst wandering through the local landscape, the artist’s inner voice is projected aloud, speculating on where all the artist have gone to and why their former residences, studios and workspaces, are left lying in a state of disrepair. As a successful shop owner in childhood years, the artist returns to this area in order to play out the fantasies of adulthood counter to the narratives of her eight year old capitalist self. Within these walks, a certain eeriness pervades empty domestic spaces, an uncertainty hangs within rooms which may or may not be inhabited by others. Animals left behind by their owners call out as the artist passes by. Flight paths interrupt the sky at various points within the piece, documenting these former inhabitants, as they exit for better circumstances. As the speed of communication hastens to an almost frenzied form, the artist is still left wondering why much of the rural psychogeography around her, feels like a scene from Wittgenstein’s Mistress.
This videos antagonistic approach to examining the future of artists and art practices, is a call to re-examine the notion of contemporary art and how it exists outside it’s commonly known gallery territory.
http://www.galerie-stock.net/images/ausstellungen/bilder/2020/No_Pity/1_P45_450px.jpg
The exhibition NO PITY! shows no mercy and highlights artworks questioning the artist's duty to reflect reality. The artworks vary in mood from lacerating to shocking, violent to desirable and comical to autobiographical narratives and focus on the de/coded female body and its representation in politics, society and social life.
The show consists of works by ten women of different age and origins, and includes work in all media—painting, sculpture, photography, video and performance. An autobiographical note often appears in the works where the working process leads the object position and the subject position to coincide, which is then questioned. Shame, guilt and pity – all very strong emotions and social power mechanisms that have been imposed on the female gender throughout history in order to form a standardized image of women and responsibility. The show illuminates where women have been, where they are now and where they are going.
The topic of sexual identity with a special emphasis on female sensuality was already dealt with by the Italian artist Carol Rama in the first half of the 20th century. She often depicts women as psychophysical ruins; whether she portrays them armless, legless or reshapes female anatomy, she shamelessly highlights the orifices. The young Austrian Evelyn Loschy also shows the body fragmented in the mental state of emergency of an existential moment and uses emotional vocabulary, as with her kinetic sculptures, thereby awakening hidden sensations and forgotten memories.
The American artist Nancy Spero was a leading figure in the feminist art movement of the 1960s and has been involved in several feminist and anti-imperialist art groups. Her art reflects her political, radical and feminist commitment: The glorification of war and the domination of men and the "natural power" of women. Language – the way it genders power or expresses violence – is a central theme in Spero's later conceptual art.
Parastou Forouhar, too, deals with issues such as repressive political mechanisms and the position of women in Muslim societies. As an Iranian artist, who lives and works in Germany, she continuously thematized in her artistic practice her country Iran. Her conceptual work is particularly relevant in today's mediated society, especially in the face of the Iraq War and the torture and prisoner abuse. Shocked by the political murder of her parents in Tehran, her work has a strong political and autobiographical connotation.
The Croatian performance artist Vlasta Delimar has been questioning and breaking the freedom of female sexuality and sexual taboos and its codification through stereotypical roles in a patriarchal society since the 1980s.The main medium of her work is her elementary, very often naked body. In a counter-process, she masks the body with female attributes such as laces, ribbon veils, etc. seeking a refuge of unprotected, female identity.
The German artist Veronika Merklein comes from the younger generation, she is also a performance artist and works with different media. Merklein is herself the protagonist of her work. She starts from "the pure an brutal (inner)life of human beings" and let them speak from the perspective of their experience. In her artistic practice, Merklein fights against all kinds of discrimination and violence in our society, starting with her own body and prejudices and stereotypes towards fat people. In the exhibition she deals with the subject of sexual abuse in the performance documentary "I did not say anything" in the form of a comic-like photo story.
Croatian-born artist Vlatka Horvat currently lives in London, after 20 years in the US. Often at the centre of her conceptual practice is an interest in breakdown, fragmentation, and collapse, and the possibility of repair and renewal. Horvat's works may seem abstract or formal but they examine and dissect local circumstances and political contexts. In her work Anatomies bodies and limbs are first disassembled and then transformed/distorted into abstract forms/ornaments.
Artist and pharmacist Denise Schellmann from Austria sees the human body in the form of many coloured cells and empty spaces that are otherwise visible under the microscope. In her drawing process, she conveys what she sees and experiences deeply intuitively, which also expands the meaning of the work and creates new possibilities of interpretation.
The human body and psyche are always included in enigmatic, ambiguous or fragile constellations in Eva Kotátková's deeply psychological and surreal works. On the border between the real and the fictional, the Czech artist transforms an original story into an abstraction, triggering very strong emotions. Her works deal with social structures and evoke feelings of control and anxiety. She is interested in difference between natural and learned or institutionally regulated behaviour.
Laura Fitzgerald is a young visual artist from Ireland and working across drawing, painting, text & video. Through her work she tells us autobiographical and fictional stories for which she finds the starting point in her own rural background and insecure artistic employment. And while she is worried that making art is – in fact – useless, she concentrates on using humour as a tool; an antidepressant and a coping strategy to everyday lived experience.
PRESS
press release: No Pity!
press image 1: Nancy Spero, Licit Exp, 1974, hand-painted collage on paper, 20,3 x 24,6 cm
press image 2: Vlasta Delimar, Injustices, 1992, collage: b/w photo with lace, 56 x 46 cm
press image 3: Carol Rama, Cadeau, 2005, watercolour, Black felt-tip pen on paper, 16,4 x 20 cm
press image 4: Vlatka Horvat, Anatomies 15, 2008, collage on paper, 22,9 x30,5 cm
Further activities
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Marko Zink | ARTIST TALK & GUIDED TOUR | M 48° 15′ 24.13″ N, 14° 30′ 6.31″ E...
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MARKO ZINK | M 48° 15′ 24.13″ N, 14° 30′ 6.31″ E | Landesmuseum Vorarlberg
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