Ida Kammerloch
and Rawan Almukhtar receive the Kunsthalle Wien Preis 2024
05. December 2024
The
two prize-winners Rawan Almukhtar (Academy of Fine Arts Vienna) and Ida Kammerloch (University of Applied Arts Vienna) will
receive a joint exhibition at Kunsthalle Wien in January 2025.
The Kunsthalle Wien Preis [Kunsthalle
Wien Prize] seeks to support emerging artists living and working in Vienna and to promote discourse on contemporary art via
an annual collaboration with Vienna’s two renowned art universities. Jointly organised by Kunsthalle Wien, the Academy of
Fine Arts Vienna and the University of Applied Arts Vienna, it is awarded annually by a jury of experts to a graduate of each
of the universities. Now in its tenth year, the prize is intended to support recent graduates, building a bridge between academic
study and professional practice, while bringing the work of these artists to a broader public.
The selected artists
each receive a € 3,000 prize in addition to a production budget towards the exhibition at Kunsthalle Wien Karlsplatz in 2025.
The exhibition will be accompanied by a publication with texts by Alicja Melzacka and Rijin Sahakian. A public programme of
artist talks, guided tours and other events will be hosted alongside the exhibition by Kunsthalle Wien’s art education team.
The Kunsthalle Wien Preis 2024
For this year’s prize, the jury reviewed more than 100
diploma and masters projects from the fields of visual and media art. Over 50 graduates of each, the Academy of Fine Arts
Vienna and the University of Applied Arts Vienna, submitted their work for consideration. Two artists were selected to hold
a joint exhibition at Kunsthalle Wien Karlsplatz opening in January 2025:
Ida Kammerloch studied
TransArts at the University of Applied Arts Vienna and was awarded the Kunsthalle Wien Preis for the video installation ULTRA
ALL INCLUSIVE. Born in Izhevsk, Russia, Kammerloch’s recent video essays explore the uncanny difference between Russian propaganda
and the lived realities of its citizens. The Kremlin Palace Hotel located in Antalya – which replicates the architecture of
the Moscow Kremlin – provides the backdrop for the artist’s diploma work. The video moves from room to room providing an unsettling
exploration of a utopia designed for wellness and relaxation, while physically resembling a place of immense power, and for
most, also a place of political terror.
Ida Kammerloch (b. 1991, Izhevsk) has held exhibitions and screenings of
her work at ok transit, Vienna (2024); Kunsthalle Düsseldorf; Städtische Galerie Neunkirchen (both 2023); Städtische Galerie
Hannover; Kunstmuseum Bonn (both 2021); Hilbertraum, Berlin; Stadtgalerie Saarbrücken; and Kubus Bochum (all 2020). She has
been awarded various scholarships by the Austrian Federal Ministry for Arts, Culture, the Civil Service and Sport (BMKOES);
Neustart Kultur (all 2022); DAAD, Moscow (2020); and she was awarded the Peter and Luise Hager Prize (2017) as well as second
place in Ö1 Talentestipendium (2024). Kammerloch is currently participating in the Cité Internationale des Arts Paris residency.
Rawan Almukhtar studied Art and Intervention | Concept at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna and was
awarded the Kunsthalle Wien Preis for his two-part installation HIJRA – Queering Borders and DUKHANIA – The Protesting
Archive. The exhibition will present paintings and drawings that take inspiration from his experiences as a refugee and an
activist. The paintings from the series HIJRA capture the stories of refugees he met on his own journey to Vienna. Another
work, DUKHANIA (‘tear gas’ in Arabic) documents the actions of protestors against the Iraqi government. Through these bodies
of work, Almukhtar seeks to create a collective moment of witnessing the stories of those who have been overlooked in Western
Europe, while also questioning the ways in which such people should be considered.