When time-travelers go into the past in science fiction films, they are usually
warned not to intervene in events there: the slightest change could result in
the present being no longer there, so that return would become impossible. Actually,
though, the present proves itself relatively resistant to manipulations; it could
be the result of various different pasts. Based on ideas of this kind, Martin
Gostner has assigned a second institution to the Viennese address Friedrichstraße
12: it is no longer only the Secession that is located there, but also an imaginary
pub or cafe, the "Gasthaus Kupferpfandl", which has been there for decades. Its
program of events, advertised on posters throughout the city, reflects and follows
the history of the Second Republic: When the V.d.U. (Verband der Unabhängigen
- League of Independents) was recognized by the Allied Council, an invitation
was issued to come to the Kupferpfandl for a "reflective meeting"; while Konrad
Lorenz was accepting the Nobel prize for medicine in Stockholm in 1973, a pet
show was taking place here; and contemporaneous with the glycol scandal in 1985,
the pub was advertising "A large glass of wine for Burgenland!" And the guests
here are just as average as the tavern itself: Gostner's video projected in the
Secession cafe shows them entering a flat above the bar almost by chance, first
looking around curiously, then poking around and finally tearing up the room.
After the destruction, the popular radio station Ö3 disseminates joviality
undisrupted.
Naming possibilities rather than postulating truths - this is the approach that
Gostner repeatedly takes with his works. In this, the posters are similar to the
"Legends", created in the early 90's: typewritten curriculum vitae of fictive
artists, which appear to be enclosures for letters of application. Stereotypes
of failure and success in mediocrity guarantee the plausibility of these biographies
just as much as their recognizability - it is easy to find motifs from one's own
history in them, which then becomes uncertain terrain in retrospect: if what is
remembered and what is forgotten are two subsets of the past, the telling of them
becomes a function with variables and repeatedly changing results.
His work for the Secession applies this method to the cultural memory of an entire
country. Where the politics of memorial events construct a mythical national identity
from history over and over again, Gostner's fragments of the history of a tavern
reveal what is concealed behind the tediously maintained facade of an Austrian
special status: expediency, indifference and the notorious incapability of responding
to difference and deviation other than with repression or ignorance. Grand politics
and the everyday life of the common people are mutually contingent, whereby grumbling
about "the ones at the top" is simultaneously the price and the reward for comfortable
irresponsibility. Gostner avoids any edifying gesture in his work: it is possible
to intervene in events, but intervention must be constantly rediscovered and reinvented.
He shifts stories of detours, deviations, subtexts into the place of a linear
history: "I do not take history as historiography, as what once was. (...) If
you could see history as a plastic object, then I illuminate it from a certain
angle and see. In that moment: I remember, I imagine."
PUBLICATION
 |
MARTIN
GOSTNER
Kupferpfandl -und darüber
28 pages, 8 colored illustrations
authors: Matthias Herrmann, Frank Frangenberg
Secession 2001, ISBN 3-901926-30-5
___________________
Available in the
shop
|
Biographical Information: Martin Gostner, born 1957, lives and works in Innsbruck.
Solo exhibitions (selected): Tiroler Landesmuseum Ferdinandeum, Innsbruck; Rupertinum,
Salzburg (2000); Kunstraum Johann Widauer, Innsbruck (1999); Kölnischer Kunstverein;
Galerie Hoffmann & Senn, Vienna (1998); Galerie Christian Gögger, Munich;
Villa Merkel, Esslingen (1997); Galerie Giorgio Persano, Turin (1996); Forum Stadtpark,
Prague (1995); Galerie Sophia Ungers, Cologne (1992).
Group exhibitions (selected): Kunstraum Dornbirn; Kunstraum Johann Widauer, Innsbruck;
Hier, Da und Dort, Singen (2000); Galerie Elisabeth & Klaus Thoman, Innsbruck
(1998); Kunstverein Ludwigsburg; Galerie Fotohof, Salzburg (1999); Kunsthaus Bregenz;
Galerie der Stadt Schwaz (1997); Kärntner Landesgalerie, Klagenfurt; Kölnischer
Kunstverein; Forum Stadtpark, Graz; Umhausen, Ötztal (1995); Portikus, Frankfurt
(1994).
Sponsors:
Erste Bank - Partner of
the Secession
GlaxoSmithKline -
Sponsor of the Secession
Bundeskanzleramt Kunst
Wien Kultur
Friends of the Secession
For further information and photographic material please contact:
Tamara Schwarzmayr
Secession, Association of Visual Artists Vienna Secession
Friedrichstraße 12, 1010 Vienna
Tel: +43-1-5875307-21, Fax: +43-1-5875307-34
presse@secession.at