Banksy: Bomb hugger, 2002, Sammlung Reinking
Exhibition | 16.05.2009 EXTENDED UNTIL 4.10.2009

Urban Art

Works from the Reinking Collection
Urban Art is everywhere. Unsolicited, it leaves its traces and signs in urban space. It conquers the public sphere with stickers, posters, extensive murals, and stencil graffiti. It’s galleries are the world’s streets. What began as graffiti in the large cities on America’s east coast forty years ago has since experienced a decisive development. Even if the majority of actions continue to be produced anonymously and illegally, it is no longer exclusively a phenomenon associated with youth culture. Many of the protagonists have emancipated themselves from the pictorial language of graffiti writing and experimented with new forms of expression. With their subtle and humorous, occasionally offensive interventions in the urban landscape they attempt to force open familiar visual habits. As a rule, they are not concerned with damaging the urban infrastructure but with participating in a dialogue with the public.
Brad Downey: Whats-Up or The Burden of Children 2006; Ort: Brooklyn, NY, USA; Dauer: 2,5 Monate
Brad Downey: "Whats-Up" or "The Burden of Children" 2006; Ort: Brooklyn, NY, USA; Dauer: 2,5 Monate

There is a variety of Urban Art. Temporary actions, unusual objects and sculptures, lettering, and characters are woven into the visual flow of the city as stumbling blocks. The possibility that many of the passers-by take no notice of these interventions is consciously taken into account. Thus they comprise a subversive counterweight to the constant presence of advertising, whose blinking images and seductive buying options dominate everyday life. It is not only in this respect that Urban Art is the expression of a critical examination of the social, cultural, and economic dimensions of the city, which in the age of globalization is rapidly and sustainably changing.

Tilt: Kassi, Sydney, 2004, Sammlung Reinking

[Translate to Englisch:] In den letzten Jahren erlebte Urban Art

Urban Art has recently experienced a downright hype. Numerous galleries and museums around the world have organized exhibitions, and works by the most well-known representatives of the genre have gained premium prices at auctions. What some accuse of being commercialization, the loss of authenticity, and the betrayal of original interests is viewed by many artists as a new chance. By transferring their themes and methods in the protected space of the museum, they develop very new and surprising approaches. But what kind of art is this that leaves its ancestral terrain? Do the works not require the city as a resonating space, as an immediate opponent? And is one of the essential features of Urban Art not its impermanence, its spontaneity? The Weserburg will be devoting itself to these questions in a large-scale exhibition centered around works from the Reinking Collection.

DTagno: Elastischer Kontext aka Offenlegung des Arsenals, 2009 (Detail)
Obey: ohne Titel, 2004-2006 (Detail), Sammlung Reinking

The Hamburg-based collector Rik Reinking is a man of conviction. He has for many years now been accompanying numerous artists in the scene with great passion and intensity. His collection now includes representative works by some of the most influential protagonists. These include such well-known names as Banksy (UK), DAIM (Germany), Brad Downey (USA), Os Gêmeos (Brazil), Shepard Fairey (USA), and Zevs (France). The exhibition will be supplemented by several artistic stances and new works, which have in part been produced specifically for Bremen. In addition, artistic interventions are planned in the Hanseatic city’s public space. Thus the exhibition will not only afford insight into a still young, unusual collection, it is at the same time a venue for the most recent developments of non-conformist art form that is in a constant state of flux.

The exhibition will be supplemented by an attractive supporting program with workshops, walks through town, film evenings, and discussions and thus stimulate a lively as well as critical examination of the phenomenon of Urban Art. In addition, a comprehensive catalogue will be published including numerous illustrations and texts that are worth reading.

Mark Jenkins: Embed #1 - Sitter, 2006, Sammlung Reinking

The exhibition concept was developed by Ingo Clauß, curator at the Weserburg; Adrian Nabi, who as the initiator and curator of Berlin’s Backjumps exhibitions is one of the most well-known aficionados of the scene; and the collector Rik Reinking, who has been closely connected with the museum for many years. Responding to an invitation by the 32nd German Protestant Kirchentag, parallel to the exhibition, Kunstraum Kreuzberg/Bethanien is realizing the project Sign Seeing in Bremen. Besides highly interesting events related to Urban Art, the Copenhagen-based artist Victor Ash will be designing all four sides of an overhead hopper and thus set an example for a lively examination of art of the street.

Participating artists:
Akim, Ash, Herbert Baglione, Banksy, Blu, Boxi, Bronco, Dave the Chimp, Brad Downey, Ben Eine, Shepard Fairey, Mark Jenkins, Kaws, Daniel Man, Miss Van, Mode 2, Os Gêmeos, Mirko Reisser [DAIM], Space Invader, Swoon, DTagno, Tilt, Vitché, Heiko Zahlmann, Zevs, Zezão

A collaboration between Reinking Projects and Kunstraum Kreuzberg/Bethanien. In cooperation with the 32nd German Protestant Kirchentag, May 20–24, 2009, in Bremen. Special thanks go out to the Friends of the Weserburg.

Sign_Seeing_Flyer.pdf


guided Tours

Die Ästhetik der Gewalt
Thursday 09.September, 18.00 Hour 

Olaf Metzel
Sunday 12.September, 11.30 Hour 

Noble Gäste
Thursday 16.September, 18.00 Hour 

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Events

Thomas Hartmann 
Saturday 18.September, 18:30 Hour
Unruhe-Bilder 1979-2010

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REM Concert 78
Sozialstudien und Auferstehung
 
Thursday 21.October, 20:00 Hour

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REM Concert 79
Törichte Dosis
 
Thursday 25.November, 20:00 Hour

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SHOP

Urban Art

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Opening Hours

Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday 10:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m.
Thursday 10:00 a.m.–9:00 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday 10:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m.
Closed on Monday
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Admission

Adults: €8.00
Reduced: €5.00
Families (2 adults/4 children): €14.00
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