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Thursday, 14. July 2016 - 11:00 to Sunday, 9. October 2016 - 18:00
∇ STORIES NARRATE HISTORY
Weltkulturen Labor and Green Room exhibitionΔ STORIES NARRATE HISTORY
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Dr. Mona Suhrbier in the exhibition STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Curators in the exhibition STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Weltkulturen Labor and Green Room exhibition
How would a 1950s girl feel if she lived in a magnificent Wilhelminian villa, why are Tintin and Snowy important for the work in the Africa Collection, and why is a missing chocolate ear causing a big stir?
The Weltkulturen Museum was founded in 1904 by a group of citizens for citizens. For over a century it has been a place where stories have been created, collected and narrated, but also repeatedly discarded. Who tells what, what remains untold, and what is ultimately recorded?
STORIES NARRATE HISTORY focuses on untold personal perspectives of individuals connected to the Weltkulturen Museum. The stories are strange, formative, cheerful, or doubtful, revealing unfamiliar and almost intimate insights into life and work in the buildings at Schaumainkai 29–37. The aim is not to provide a comprehensive historiography or re-narrate the museum’s history, but instead to focus on the people who have inscribed their own histories into the institution.
The exhibition uses objects, historical documents, architectural plans, photographs and publications to show that there is more than one objective reality. This forum for polyphony and multiple perspectives provides space for subjective points of view, inviting visitors to examine the exhibits and the history of this museum from a range of standpoints.
The debates concerning insufficient exhibition space are also tightly interwoven with the museum’s history. For almost fifty years there has been talk of expanding the museum: models, designs, and extensive correspondence on the issue will also be on display in two rooms.
The discussion space initiated specially for this exhibition invites visitors to exchange opinions and undertake their own analysis of topics relating to the museum. In addition, visitors will be able to put together their own small history book from stories told in the exhibition.
Postcards spanning decades of museum history can be purchased from our small shop, as well as posters, bags, games and an edition of chocolate artworks by artist Minerva Cuevas (Mexico).
Weltkulturen Labor and Green Room, Schaumainkai 37
schließen -
Thursday, 3. December 2015 - 11:00 to Sunday, 24. July 2016 - 18:00
∇ A LABOUR OF LOVE
An exhibition on the Weltkulturen Museum’s contemporary art collection from South Africa.Δ A LABOUR OF LOVE
A LABOUR OF LOVE, Weltkulturen Museum 2015-2016
Press image: Exhibition “A LABOUR OF LOVE”. Exhibition view A LABOUR OF LOVE, Weltkulturen Museum, 2015, Photo: Wolfgang Günzel
Press image: Exhibition “A LABOUR OF LOVE”. Exhibition view A LABOUR OF LOVE, Weltkulturen Museum, 2015, Photo: Wolfgang Günzel
Press image: Exhibition “A LABOUR OF LOVE”. Exhibition view A LABOUR OF LOVE, Weltkulturen Museum, 2015, Photo: Wolfgang Günzel
Press image: Exhibition “A LABOUR OF LOVE”. Chad Cordeiro Untitled, 2015, Linocut on paper, 93 x 86 cm, artist’s collection, Weltkulturen Museum, Photo: Wolfgang Günzel
Chad Cordeiro, "Schadenfreude" (malicious joy), 2015, Collection of the artist, Weltkulturen Museum
Charles Nkosi, Bad News, 1985, Collection Weltkulturen Museum
Gabi Ngcobo in the exhibition A LABOUR OF LOVE, 2015
Press image: Exhibition “A LABOUR OF LOVE”. Gabi Ngcobo (Co-curator and participating artist) in the exhibition A LABOUR OF LOVE Weltkulturen Museum, 2015, Photo: Wolfgang Günzel
Hamilton Budaza, Brotherly Love, undated, ceramics, 39 cm, Weltkulturen Museum
Press image: Exhibition “A LABOUR OF LOVE”. John Muafangejo, The Love is Approaching, 1981, Linocut on paper, 61 × 43.5 cm, Weltkulturen Museum, Photo: Wolfgang Günzel
Lionel Davis, Portrait of an artist, Linocut, 48 x 40 cm, 1981, Collection Weltkulturen Museum, photo: Wolfgang Günzel
Lucky Sibiya, untitled, 1973, Weltkulturen Museum
Nathaniel Sheppard, Ke Dezemba Boss, 2015, collection of the artist, Weltkulturen Museum
Peter Clarke, Wanted, 1978, collection Weltkulturen Museum
Sam Nhlengethwa, The 10th Anniversary of June the 16th 1986, Weltkulturen Museum
A LABOUR OF LOVE presents more than 150 works from the Weltkulturen Museum’s collection, produced in the 1980s by black South African artists, together with twenty new artistic productions by Sam Nhlengethwa, Gabi Ngcobo and four young artists from Johannesburg, specifically created for this exhibition.
The exhibition A LABOUR OF LOVE focusses on a key part of the Weltkulturen Museum’s contemporary art collection: 600 works from South Africa which the museum acquired in 1986. These works were all produced by black artists, including internationally renowned figures such as Peter Clarke, Lionel Davis, David Koloane and Sam Nhlengethwa.
A LABOUR OF LOVE comes 28 years after the first exhibition of this collection was held in Frankfurt. It re-examines a selection of 150 works inspired by very different readings of the idea of love – prints, paintings, sculptures and to date unpublished archival materials reflect on the theme from interpersonal relations to the passion and commitment which influenced both the creation of the works and the history of the collection’s acquisition.
The exhibition also integrates a contemporary perspective on this special collection through ten new works produced by Gabi Ngcobo and four young South African artists, who have dealt with the collection and its specific history since mid-July 2014. In this process of artistic reappraisal, the students have responded to the collection by creating new prints and videos. This perspective is further expanded by works created in the Weltkulturen Labor by Sam Nhlengethwa, during a residency in July 2015. Accordingly to the museum’s concept, the new works will be added to the collection.
The exhibition is curated by Gabi Ngcobo (artist, curator, educator at the Wits School of Arts Johannesburg and co-curator of the 32nd Bienal de São Paulo) and Dr. Yvette Mutumba (curator Africa Weltkulturen Museum). Participating artists: Sam Nhlengethwa (artist, Johannesburg), Gabi Ngcobo as well as Wits School of Arts students Chad Cordeiro, Michelle Monareng, Nathaniel Sheppard and Matshelane Xhakaza.
To get to the short film on A LABOUR OF LOVE, click here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G1_V0milC2oThe accompanying catalogue not only includes new articles by Yvette Mutumba, Gabi Ngcobo, Ciraj Rassool, Same Mdluli and Neo Muyanga, but also interviews with, among others, David Koloane, Peter Clarke, Bongi Dhlomo-Mautloa and Lionel Davis as well as extensive image material. Published in German and English by Kerber Verlag.
Behind the scenes:
https://instagram.com/weltkulturen.museum/
https://facebook.com/pages/Weltkulturen-Museum/334257603302617Exhibition dates
3rd December 2015 – 24th July 2016This exhibition will be travelling to South Africa.
€7 / reduced €3.50
Tue-Sun, 11am-6pm and Wed, 11am-8pm
Weltkulturen Museum, Schaumainkai 29Funded by the TURN Fund of the German Federal Cultural Foundation


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schließen
