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One year after the
joint retrospective of Hans Haacke at the Hamburg Deichtorhallen and the
Akademie der Künste in Berlin, the artist presents a new work titled
Bundesgartenschau (Federal Horticulture Show). The work refers to the
artist’s installation DER BEVÖLKERUNG (To the Population) of
the year 2000 in the northern interior courtyard of the Reichstag building
(seat of the German Parliament) in Berlin. From the center of a 7 x 21
m wooden trough white neon letters beam the words DER BEVÖLKERUNG
to the sky. They are meant as an amendment to the dedication DEM DEUTSCHEN
VOLKE (To the German People) of 1916 on the building’s façade.
The Members of the Bundestag were invited to bring 100 pounds of soil
from their electoral districts and to deposit them around the neon letters.
This invitation is extended to newly elected Members as well. Naturally,
the soil carries seeds. Additional seeds are imported by the wind and
by birds. Spontaneous vegetation develops.
The artist’s proposal for the project led to a heated debate in
the committees of the Bundestag and the German press. On the one hand,
the criticism was directed at the title of the work, his dedication to
the BEVÖLKERUNG (population) – a term not burdened by German
history like that of the Volk (people). On the other hand, the use of
soil was suspected of evoking associations with the national socialist
ideology of Blood and Soil, even though the mixing of diverse soils and
the artist’s dedication to all who happen to live within the country’
borders – irrespective of their ethnic and national origin -are
incompatible with the national socialist idea of "purity." The
controversy led to a debate of the Bundestag on April 5, 2000, at which
the project was approved by the slim margin of 260 votes in favour and
258 against. By now, 275 Members of the Bundestag have participated by
bringing soil from their district. Several brought soil from symbolically
significant locations, as did Wolfgang Thierse (then the speaker of the
Bundestag) from the Jewish cemetery in his Berlin district.
Since the inauguration of the project on September 12, 2000, the controversial
"German soil" has been covered by dense vegetation, without
any gardening. Small animals, snails, spiders and insects populate the
site, as well.
During many visits, Hans Haacke took photographs of the plants and animals.
These photographs, collected over seven years, are the material for his
Bundesgartenschau. The work is constituted by a view from above of the
entire installation, together with 224 close-up images of the plants and
animals at various seasons of the year. It is complemented by a current
list of all Members of the Bundestag who have participated in the project.
The work can be understood as an ironic commentary to the national debate
about Haacke´s project, which has calmed down considerably by now.
Also the title Bundesgartenschau can to be seen in this light. While the
biennial Federal Horticulture Show is a competitive exhibition of gardeners
and landscape architects, the ecosystem of DER BEVÖLKERUNG does without
horticultural interventions. The card announcing the exhibition looks
like an old-fashioned picture postcard with a serrated edge. It shows
the German Romanticists’ Blaue Blume (blue flower), represented
by a periwinkle (Vinca minor). It invites a host of associations from
the history of ideas. On the upper floor of the gallery we will show works
by Hans Haacke from the 1960s. |
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| Flora and Fauna, Selection from a total of 224
photos of Bundesgartenschau, C-prints, each 27,9 x 35.6 cm |
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| Early works |

Condensation Cube, 1963/1965
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Wave, 1964 |

Wave,
1964 |
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Large Water Level, 1964
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Large Water Level, 1964
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I have partially filled Plexiglas
containers of a simple stereometric form with water and have sealed them.
The intrusion of light warms the inside of the boxes. Since the inside
temperature is always higher than the surrounding temperature, the water
enclosed condenses: a delicate veil of drops begins to develop on the
inside walls. At first, they are so small that one can distinguish single
drops from only a very close distance. The drops grow - hour-by-hour -
small ones combine with larger ones. The speed of growth depends on the
intensity and the angle of the intruding light. After a day, a dense cover
of clearly defined drops has developed and they all reflect light. With
continuing condensation, some drops reach such a size that their weight
overcomes the forces of adhesion and they run down along the walls, leaving
a trace. This trace starts to grow together again. Weeks after, manifold
traces, running side by side, have developed. According to their respective
age, they have drops of varying sizes. The process of condensation does
not end. The box has a constantly but slowly changing appearance, which
never repeats itself. The conditions are comparable to a living organism
which reacts in a flexible manner to its surroundings. The image of condensation
cannot be precisely predicted. It is changing freely, bound only by statistical
limits. I like this freedom. © Hans Haacke, New York, October
1965 Written in German. First
publication in French translation “J’ai rempli en partie...”
in: Robho 2, Paris, November/December 1967 |
| |
We
(all) are the people, 2003 |
_Titel.jpg)
We (all) are the people, 2003 |
_Beschreibung.jpg)
We (all) are the people, 2003 |
_Kirchhof01.jpg)
We (all) are the people, 2003 |
_Kirchhof.jpg)
We (all) are the people, 2003 |
_Luftsicht.jpg)
We (all) are the people, 2003 |