History

The over 30-year success story of the Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien

Flashback: to the year 1980. With the idea and backing of the popular Viennese actor Heinz Conrad, the first exhibitions were organised in the former counter hall of the Österreichische Creditanstalt für Handel und Gewerbe (Austrian Bank of Trade and Commerce), premises built in 1914 and then standing empty. The curtain-raiser was a comprehensive show on Austria’s cultural and intellectual history from 1880 to 1980: “Aufbruch in die Moderne” (Starting out into the Modern Age), curated by Rupert Feuchtmüller and organised by Ivo Stanek, boasted straightaway the proud statistic of 28,000 visitors.

The occasion for this project was the Länderbank’s centenary. And the subsequent exhibitions, such as “Fotografis” – a presentation of the superlative photograph collection of the Länderbank, as it was then called – also proved to be great attractions for the public. The success of these exhibitions was as surprising as it was overwhelming, so that the director of the Länderbank and later Federal Chancellor Franz Vranitzky initiated a resolution to set up a permanent exhibition venue oriented on international standards – the Länderbank Kunstforum was born, and the present director of the Albertina, Klaus Albrecht Schröder, was its first director.

 

Trendsetter Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien

In 1988, the Austrian star architect Gustav Peichl was commissioned to design the first reconstruction of the Kunstforum, making it the most modern exhibition building in Austria at the time. The re-opening was in March 1989 with “Egon Schiele und seine Zeit” (Egon Schiele and his Time). This exhibition attracted 186,000 visitors and was successful not only in Vienna; it created a sensation on tour in London, Munich and Wuppertal. The Schiele exhibition in the Kunstforum was the first major debut of the then little known Leopold Collection; it thus functioned as a booster for the Austrian Republic to purchase the collection and set up the present-day Leopoldmuseum.

Ever since this time, the objective of the Kunstforum has been very clearly defined: the presentation of international top exhibitions on classical modern art and its forerunners: Schiele, Kokoschka, Turner, Van Gogh, Cézanne, Picasso, Miró, Malevich, Kandinsky, Chagall, Braque, Bonnard and many more.

Ingried Brugger took over as director of the Kunstforum in 2000 and since then the programme of the exhibition premises on Freyung has included major theme exhibitions designed to foster an in-depth, or fresh understanding of modern art (“Kunst und Wahn” – Art and Delusion – “Rot in der russischen Kunst” – Red in Russian Art – “Jahrhundert der Frauen” – The Woman’s Century – “Mythos Großstadt” – The Myth of the Great City – “Nolde und die Südsee” – Nolde and the South Seas – “Futurismus – Radikale Avantgarde” – Futurism – Radical Avant-garde – “Superstars – Von Warhol bis Madonna”), as well as the presentation of the Austrian and international avant-garde since 1945 (Arnulf Rainer, Adolf Frohner, Christian Ludwig Attersee, Karel Appel, Roy Lichtenstein).

With Brugger, the Austrian avant-gardes or those living in Austria in the post-war period also found their way into the exhibition program for the first time: Arnulf Rainer's "Gegen. Bilder" between Cézanne and Picasso (2000); Adolf Frohner's "Verteidigung der Mitte" between Miró and Nolde (2001); Christian Ludwig Attersee between Magritte and Lüpertz (2005); Herbert Brandl between Botero and Barceló (2012); Jürgen Messensee between Barceló and Basquiat (2013); Siegfried Anzinger between Stanley Kubrick and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (2014); Hubert Schmalix between Gursky and couples of the Russian avant-garde (2015); Martin Kippenberger between Balthus and James Welling; Gerhard Rühm between Man Ray and the fascination of Japan (2018); Daniel Spoerri after Gerhard Richter (2021) and David Hockney (2022). Following Helmut Newton (2023).

 

Focus on Female Artist

The presentation and the positioning of Austrian artists in the international context between Abstraction and New Objectivity, American Expressionism and the New German School, Surrealism and Dada, Futurism and Pop Art is a merit of Brugger's Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien team. And the scientifically processed addition to the collection "Fotografis", the rather significant treasure of over 1,000 photographs from the pioneering era of photography, which was incorporated into the Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien.

In addition, the Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien sees itself as a competence center for the thematic field of women, artists, feminist art: while Brugger had already prepared the ground in 1999 as curator of the exhibition "Jahrhundert der Frauen", main exhibitions such as Tamara de Lempicka (2004), Frida Kahlo (2010), Birgit Jürgenssen (2011), Meret Oppenheim (2013), Georgia O`Keeffe (2016), "Flying High" (2019) and "The Cindy Sherman Effect. Identity and Transformation in Contemporary Art" (2020)  the path towards the increasingly intensive and long overdue classification of female artists in the canon of art history, also internationally, is  consistently pursued. In 2021, the team presents Rebecca Horn, followed by Kiki Kogelnik in 2023.

Most successful exhibition house

A relatively short period after the major reconstruction, the exhibition building – meanwhile renamed the Bank Austria Kunstforum – housed a large-scale retrospective on the painter Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller in 1992, which attracted such enormous crowds that it had to keep closing its doors at short notice. Winter 1992/93 saw the next great rebuilding phase and the Bank Austria Kunstforum was enlarged, doubling its exhibition space.

Now the available space measures 1,120 square metres, a worthy venue not only for international museums to present their most important works – for instance the Guggenheim Museum New York and the Russian Museum St Petersburg; leading private collectors have also put their collections on show here to the general public for the first time, including Bernard Picasso in autumn 2000, the family Im Obersteg in autumn 2003, the Berlin collector couple Ulla and Heiner Pietzsch and Hubert Loser.

2000 was extraordinarily successful for the Bank Austria Kunstforum. In this year alone, 550,000 visitors from all over the world visited the exhibitions “Cézanne: vollendet – unvollendet” – Cézanne: finished – unfinished – and “Picasso: Hauptwerke aus der Sammlung Bernard Picasso” – Picasso: Major Works from the Bernard Picasso Collection. 

To this day, the Bank Austria Kunstforum continues to create new blockbusters: René Magritte (2005), Frida Kahlo (2010), Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (2014/2015).

 

tresor at Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien

In 2005, 400 square meters of new mediation and exhibition space for contemporary art were created at the lower floor of the Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien, in the vault of the former Zentralsparkasse and Kommerzbank: the tresor at the Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien. With it, the Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien also has a laboratory for the young and contemporary art scene. Questions of contemporary art are to be addressed with socially relevant themes ("Pablo Chiereghin: Riot Design", "Corona Art", "Anna Artaker: The Pencil of Nature", "paraflows.XI - Identity", "Rainer Ganahl: I Wanna Be Alfred Jarry", "Guido Kucsko: Double Coated IP Capsule") are connected in concrete projects.

Careers of artists do infrequently take their starting point here, for example: Martin Schnur, Tobias Pils, Lorenz Estermann, Anna Jermolaewa, Lucia Nimcova, Svenja Deininger, Sofie Thorsen, Stephanie Pflaum, Werner Schrödl, Thean Chie Chan, Alfredo Basuglia; Creative artists from other art genres are presented at the tresor, complementing their work (Oscar Bronner, Peter Patzak, Alf Poier, Herta Müller and many more). In addition, the tresor in the Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien serves as an ideal presentation space for awards such as the Eisler Preis, the Henkel Art Award, Corporate Collections (UniCredit Bank Austria Art Collection, Your Family Entertainment) or external projects.

150 exhibitions in 30 years

Every year about 250,000 people come and see Bank Austria Kunstforum exhibitions. This means that the Bank Austria Kunstforum is one of the five most frequented exhibition organisations in Austria and one of the Top 20 of all the most popular Viennese tourist attractions.

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