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Mathilde Arnoux (ed.), Maria Bremer (ed.): Westkunst, 1981

Mathilde Arnoux (ed.), Maria Bremer (ed.)

Westkunst, 1981
A Historiography of Modernism Exhibited

Softcover, 304 pages

Date of publication: 17.04.2025

In 1981, the Cologne Trade-Fair centre hosted a large exhibition titled “Westkunst: Zeitgenössische Kunst seit 1939” (Western Art: Contemporary Art since 1939). Organized by art critic Laszlo Glozer and curator Kasper König, the Western-centric survey highlighted avant-garde art and politically charged themes of freedom and individual expression. By examining “Westkunst”’s historiographical stakes in light of the Iron Curtain division of Europe, the show is revealed as paradigmatic of the ways in which hegemonic concepts of ‘Western art’ and the accompanying processes of othering were fashioned in the art world. In this collective volume, “Westkunst”’s universalising claims are scrutinised by focusing on the artistic tendencies exhibited; on exhibitionary discourses and practices of decontextualisation, comparison, and appropriation; on the alleged realisation of the values of progress, freedom, and autonomy; on the enacted conceptions of temporality and the architectural devices of narrativisation; on the exhibition’s blind spots and exclusions and the critical reactions it elicited. This analytic output makes fresh use of the archival materials, which are neither centralised nor systematized, with significant excerpts republished throughout the book. Seen through the lens of exhibition history, this revisiting of “Westkunst” sheds light on a broader trend of cultural conservatism that was gaining strength in the 1980s, just before the end of the Cold War, and on the start of new forms of globalisation.

  • Cold War
  • avant-garde
  • exhibition
  • curatorial practice

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Mathilde Arnoux

Mathilde Arnoux

Mathilde Arnoux is an art historian specializing in transcultural processes in Europe of the 19th and 20th century. She is Research Director and Head of French Publications at the German Center for Art History in Paris. Her PhD obtained from Université Paris IV in 2003 on the reception of German paintings by French museums between 1871 and 1981 was a starting point to question the linear logic of ‘introduction, dissemination, and reception’ that often determines the analysis of relationships in the form of circulation phenomena. Since then, each of her research projects is in its own way part of a reflection on relationality (the ability to relate) and its multi-layered nature, focusing especially on processes of interaction, constitution, and transformation: the edition of the correspondence between Henri Fantin-Latour and Otto Scholderer, 1858–1902 (2004–2009); the team work around the ERC-funded project “OwnReality – To Each His Own Reality. The Notion of the Real in the Fine Arts of France, West Germany, East Germany and Poland between 1960 and 1989” (2011–2016) which led to her habilitation in 2017; the seminar and publication project with Anne Zeitz around the notion of polyphony in contemporary art (2021–2025).

Maria Bremer

Maria Bremer is an art historian specializing in contemporary art and exhibition history. She earned her PhD from Freie Universität Berlin in 2017 with a dissertation on the documenta editions of the 1970s, which was published in 2019 under the title Individuelle Mythologien. Kunst jenseits der Kritik. She worked as a research associate in the ERC-funded project “OwnReality” at the German Center for Art History in Paris (2011–2015) and as a postdoctoral researcher and Minerva Fast Track Fellow at the Bibliotheca Hertziana – Max Planck Institute for Art History in Rome (2017–2021). In 2021, she joined the Art History Institute of the Ruhr-Universität Bochum. Since October 2024, she has been a Visiting Professor at the Department of Art History at the University of Applied Arts in Vienna. Currently, she is developing a book project on the historiographical implications of all-women exhibitions in 1970s Italy and their contemporary restaging.
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