Related to this context are the phenomena of therapeutic
self-reflection and its capitalistic exploitation, which have persistently accompanied the social changes of the 20th and
21st centuries. As sociologist Eva Illouz traces in her book Saving the Modern Soul: Therapy, Emotions, and the Culture of
Self-Help (2008), this “emotional style” emerged in the interwar period in the course of a modification of Sigmund Freud’s
theories via the American culture of ego psychology. Today, creativity plays a fundamental role in processes of subjectivation
and navigates the tension between personal desires and social expectations, between longing and imperative. Cultural sociologist
Andreas Reckwitz also speaks of an “ideal of creativity” in this context.
Atmospherically, the exhibition title
Ins Dunkle schwimmen [
Swimming into the Dark] refers less to an ominous unknown but rather to the deep waters,
dangerous currents, and at times dark abysses of self-doubt and perceived inadequacy that are closely associated with creativity.
Where post-pandemic trauma coping strategies often only offer individualizing self-care instead of communal care and the ecological,
social and political crises are intensifying, (self-) exploitation relationships are becoming increasingly existential.
This dialectic of creative self-optimization, self-care, and self-exploitation, in turn, is closely related to models
of artistic subjectivation. As “self-designers” par excellence, artists have been the prototypes of the creative existence
that has now become a job requirement for all members of society. Distorted in this way, the modernist idea of the “freedom
of art” turns out be a paradox and a dilemma, in which the notion of artistic-creative self-expression becomes the “enemy
within”; or, on the other hand, a principle to be circumvented through consciously chosen passivity or collective action.
Conversely, given the increasing automation of creative practice, the fundamental question of responsibility for and the definition
of artistic work arises anew.
The exhibition
Ins Dunkle schwimmen gathers works of art that deal with
these contradictory demands in the context of artistic production, encountering abysses and limits in the process. On the
one hand, it includes works from the Collection of the University of Applied Arts Vienna that open up the fiction of the “autonomous
work of art” to re-negotiation. On the other hand, it features works that inquire into the conditions of the production of
the self, explore the relationships between artistic production and work on one’s own life, and search for exit strategies
from the instrumentalization of the pathos of creativity and freedom.
Curated by Cosima Rainer and Robert Müller
Curatorial Assistance: Laura Egger-Karlegger and Manon Fougère
Exhibition Management: Judith Burger, Laura
Egger-Karlegger and Manon Fougère’
Exhibition Design: Robert Müller
Exhibition Office University Gallery
Anette Freudenberger
Opening hoursWed – Sat: 2–6 p.m. (closed on holidays)
Entrance
is free of charge!
More
information