JENNY
HOLZER
Truth Before Power
Exhibition duration: June 12
thru September 5, 2004
Opening:
Friday, June 11, 2004, 8:00 p.m.
Press conference: Friday,
June 11, 2004, 12:30 noon
Shuttle: The press conferences for the exhibitions Jenny
Holzer at the Kunsthaus Bregenz and Andy Warhol at the Kunstmuseum
Liechtenstein and the Kunstmuseum St. Gallen will all be held on
the same day. To enable you to attend all these events a shuttle
bus will be available.
From Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein: 11:15 a.m. to Kunsthaus Bregenz
From Kunsthaus Bregenz: 1:45 p.m. to Kunstmuseum St. Gallen
The Kunsthaus Bregenz is pleased to announce the opening on June
11, 2004 of a major exhibition, TRUTH BEFORE POWER, by the
American artist Jenny Holzer. The show explores the United States
government's complex political and commercial relations with the
Middle East from the end of the Second World War to the present,
the United States' current "war" on terrorism, the consequences
of 9/11 and ensuing debate, the theory and practice of intelligence
and counter-intelligence, and the problem of achieving a just and
workable balance between secrecy and transparency.
Almost all texts used by Holzer are US government documents - primarily
official communications, reports, and letters made available to
the public under the landmark legislation, the "Freedom of
Information Act." Many texts were originally "classified"
or confidential at the time they were written, and remain heavily
redacted.
TRUTH BEFORE POWER, the title of Holzer's Bregenz project,
alludes to "Estimates and Influence," an essay published
in 1968 arguing that unbiased intellectual rigor must be the first
principle of intelligence work, written by Sherman Kent, one of
the founders of the CIA.
Holzer will install her electronic sign arrays on the top three
floors of the Kunsthaus. Texts for the museum's second floor,
programmed in red and amber, were chosen to convey the welter of
voices involved in foreign policy decision-making during the administrations
of the presidents Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, William Jefferson
Clinton, and George W. Bush. Texts for the museum's third floor,
programmed in amber, were selected from the literature of American
intelligence to explicate the philosophy of its work and its contribution
to presidential foreign policy, or illustrate the relationship between
the intelligence community and legislators engaged in its oversight.
A recent work by the contemporary American poet, Henri Cole, "To
the Forty-Third President," will appear in blue electronics
on the first floor of the Kunsthaus, and in companion tree installations
created by Holzer for the Kunsthaus lobby and the nearby Johanniterkirche
in Feldkirch.
Xenon projections
Since 1996, Holzer has thrown scrolling texts of monumental scale
onto architecture and landscape using high powered projectors fitted
with xenon lamps that run 185 mm film. "Seen and absorbed rather
than read," much like advertising and public announcements,
in the view of critic Peter Schjeldahl, Holzer's xenon venues have
included the Spanish Steps in Rome, the Louvre in Paris, the National
Gallery in Berlin, and the undeveloped landscape surrounding Rio
de Janeiro. For her Bregenz project, Holzer has chosen the glass
façade of the Kunsthaus for the inaugural evening of the
show. Among other selected venues on succeeding nights are Schattenburg
Castle in Feldkirch, the dam of the Vermunt Reservoir, and the Kanisfluh
Palisades. Text is taken from government documents and Henri Cole's
poem fromthe exhibition as well as from the artist's writing. At
some sites, including Vermunt Reservoir, a special largeformat film
will be shown.
Jenny Holzer
For more than twenty-five years, Jenny Holzer has presented her
astringent ideas, arguments, and sorrows in public places and international
exhibitions, including the Venice Biennale, the Reichstag, and the
Guggenheim Museums in New York and Bilbao. Her medium, whether formulated
as a t-shirt, as a plaque, or as an LED sign, always is writing,
and the public dimension is integral to the delivery of her work.
Starting in the late 1970s with the Truisms and Inflammatory Essays
posters which Holzer plastered on buildings all over New York, and
up to her recent xenon projections on prominent façades,
her texts and practices have rivaled ignorance and violence with
humor, kindness and moral courage. Holzer lives and works in Hoosick,
NY.
Henri Cole
Henri Cole has published five collections of work, most recently
Middle Earth (Farrar, Strauss & Giroux, 2003), which received
the prestigious Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award in 2004. A Briggs-Copeland
lecturer at Harvard from 1993-1999, he has taught at Yale, Columbia,
and Smith, and currently teaches at Bennington College. Nominated
for a Pulitzer Prize in 2004, he has been praised by critic Harold
Bloom as "a central poet of his generation." Cole lives
in Boston, MA.
The Kunsthaus Bregenz exhibition opens to the public on June 12,
2004 and will remain on view until September 5, 2004. Xenon projections
will take place at various locations in Bregenz and Vorarlberg from
1118 June. A catalogue, TRUTH BEFORE POWER, will be published
in conjunction with the show.
Xenon Projections by Jenny Holzer in Vorarlberg
June 11 - June 18, 2004
The projections can be seen from 10:00 p.m. till 1:00 a.m. on the
dates and at the venues specified:
Friday, June 11
Bregenz
Kunsthaus Bregenz, facade facing Karl Tizian Platz
Saturday, June 12
Bregenz
Kunsthaus Bregenz, facade facing the lake
Sunday, June 13
Feldkirch
Schattenburg castle
Monday, June 14
Hohenems (Hohenems / Dornbirn)
Rhomberg rock quarry
Tuesday, June 15
Silvretta Hochalpenstrasse, Montafon
Vermunt reservoir, dam
Wednesday, June 16
Lech, Arlberg
Church
Thursday, June 17
Bregenz Woods (Schnepfau / Hirschau)
Kanisfluh palisades
Friday, June 18
Bregenz
Bregenz Festival, "West Side Story" floating stage
Kunsthaus Bregenz
| Venue/Organizer: |
Kunsthaus Bregenz,
Karl Tizian Platz, A-6900 Bregenz |
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| Director: |
Eckhard Schneider |
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| Curator: |
Rudolf Sagmeister
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Press and public
relations:
Press queries: |
Birgit Albers
Phone: 0043 - (0) 5574 - 48594 - 13
Fax: 0043 - (0) 5574 - 48594 - 8
b.albers@kunsthaus-bregenz.at
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| Press photos to
download: |
www.kunsthaus-bregenz.at
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| Publications and
archive: |
Kathrin Wiethege
Phone: 0043 - (0) 5574 - 48594 - 16
Fax: 0043 - (0) 5574 - 48594 - 8
k.wiethege@kunsthaus-bregenz.at |
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| Art communication: |
Winfried
Nussbaummüller
Phone: 0043 - (0) 5574 - 48594 - 17
Fax: 0043 - (0) 5574 - 48594 - 8
w.nussbaummueller@kunsthaus-bregenz.at |
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| Opening hours: |
Tuesday - Sunday
10 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Thursday 10 a.m. - 9 p.m. |
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